Author:
Cairns SC,Pople AR,Grigg GC
Abstract
Density distributions of red and western grey kangaroos in the South Australian pastoral zone were
determined for the period 1978-86. The habitat associations of these kangaroos were analysed using the
densities on half-degree blocks, and information on landform and soil type, land use and degradation,
vegetation, and climate. Red kangaroos were found throughout the pastoral zone, the highest densities
being in the north-east. Western grey kangaroos were restricted to the southern parts of the pastoral
zone. Higher densities of red kangaroos were associated with pastoral land use, with brown calcareous
and red duplex soils, and with areas dominated by low bluebush shrublands. They were not particularly
closely associated with areas dominated by mulga. Habitat associations of red kangaroos were different
in drought years compared to non-drought years. Changes in density distribution during drought appears
to have been due to the patchiness of rainfall. The relative effect of the drought was greatest in
the northern part of the pastoral zone. Outside this effect, recent rainfall was found to be of only
secondary importance to the overall density distribution of red kangaroos.
Climatic factors appeared to be the major determinants of the density distribution of western grey
kangaroos. Low evaporation and relatively high rainfall characterised areas with high densities of
western grey kangaroos. As was the case with red kangaroos, habitat heterogeneity appeared to be an
important requirement of western grey kangaroos. Also, habitat associations were different in drought
and non-drought years. Despite this, as was the case with red kangaroos, recent rainfall was only of
secondary importance to the overall distribution of western grey kangaroos.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
17 articles.
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