Do Tasmanian devil declines impact ecosystem function?

Author:

Stephenson Torrey1ORCID,Hudiburg Tara2ORCID,Mathias Justin M.3ORCID,Jones Menna4ORCID,Lynch Laurel M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Soil and Water Systems University of Idaho Moscow Idaho USA

2. Department of Forest, Rangeland and Fire Sciences University of Idaho Moscow Idaho USA

3. Department of Biology West Virginia University Morgantown West Virginia USA

4. School of Natural Sciences University of Tasmania Hobart Tasmania Australia

Abstract

AbstractTasmanian eucalypt forests are among the most carbon‐dense in the world, but projected climate change could destabilize this critical carbon sink. While the impact of abiotic factors on forest ecosystem carbon dynamics have received considerable attention, biotic factors such as the input of animal scat are less understood. Tasmanian devils (Sarcophilus harrisii)—an osteophageous scavenger that can ingest and solubilize nutrients locked in bone material—may subsidize plant and microbial productivity by concentrating bioavailable nutrients (e.g., nitrogen and phosphorus) in scat latrines. However, dramatic declines in devil population densities, driven by the spread of a transmissible cancer, may have underappreciated consequences for soil organic carbon (SOC) storage and forest productivity by altering nutrient cycling. Here, we fuse experimental data and modeling to quantify and predict future changes to forest productivity and SOC under various climate and scat‐quality futures. We find that devil scat significantly increases concentrations of nitrogen, ammonium, phosphorus, and phosphate in the soil and shifts soil microbial communities toward those dominated by r‐selected (e.g., fast‐growing) phyla. Further, under expected increases in temperature and changes in precipitation, devil scat inputs are projected to increase above‐ and below‐ground net primary productivity and microbial biomass carbon through 2100. In contrast, when devil scat is replaced by lower‐quality scat (e.g., from non‐osteophageous scavengers and herbivores), forest carbon pools are likely to increase more slowly, or in some cases, decline. Together, our results suggest often overlooked biotic factors will interact with climate change to drive current and future carbon pool dynamics in Tasmanian forests.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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