The rise of hyperabundant native generalists threatens both humans and nature

Author:

Moore Jonathan H.12,Gibson Luke1,Amir Zachary3,Chanthorn Wirong4,Ahmad Abdul Hamid5,Jansen Patrick A.67ORCID,Mendes Calebe P.3,Onuma Manabu8,Peres Carlos A.29,Luskin Matthew Scott310ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Southern University of Science and Technology 1088 Xueyuan Blvd, Nanshan Shenzhen China

2. School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia Norwich Research Park Norwich NR4 7TJ UK

3. School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland Brisbane St Lucia Queensland 4072 Australia

4. Department of Environmental Technology and Management, Faculty of Environment Kasetsart University 50 Ngamwongwan Road, Jatujak District Bangkok 10900 Thailand

5. Institute for Tropical Biology and Conservation, Universiti Malaysia Sabah Jalan UMS Kota Kinabalu 88400 Malaysia

6. Department of Environmental Sciences Wageningen University Droevendaalsesteeg 4 Wageningen 6708 PB Netherlands

7. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Roosevelt Ave. Tupper Building – 401 Panama City 0843‐03092 Panama

8. National Institute for Environmental Studies 16‐2 Onagava Tsukuba‐City 305‐8506 Japan

9. Instituto Juruá R. Ajuricaba, 359 – Aleixo Manaus 69083‐020 Brazil

10. Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science, University of Queensland St Lucia Queensland 4072 Australia

Abstract

ABSTRACTIn many disturbed terrestrial landscapes, a subset of native generalist vertebrates thrives. The population trends of these disturbance‐tolerant species may be driven by multiple factors, including habitat preferences, foraging opportunities (including crop raiding or human refuse), lower mortality when their predators are persecuted (the ‘human shield’ effect) and reduced competition due to declines of disturbance‐sensitive species. A pronounced elevation in the abundance of disturbance‐tolerant wildlife can drive numerous cascading impacts on food webs, biodiversity, vegetation structure and people in coupled human–natural systems. There is also concern for increased risk of zoonotic disease transfer to humans and domestic animals from wildlife species with high pathogen loads as their abundance and proximity to humans increases. Here we use field data from 58 landscapes to document a supra‐regional phenomenon of the hyperabundance and community dominance of Southeast Asian wild pigs and macaques. These two groups were chosen as prime candidates capable of reaching hyperabundance as they are edge adapted, with gregarious social structure, omnivorous diets, rapid reproduction and high tolerance to human proximity. Compared to intact interior forests, population densities in degraded forests were 148% and 87% higher for wild boar and macaques, respectively. In landscapes with >60% oil palm coverage, wild boar and pig‐tailed macaque estimated abundances were 337% and 447% higher than landscapes with <1% oil palm coverage, respectively, suggesting marked demographic benefits accrued by crop raiding on calorie‐rich food subsidies. There was extreme community dominance in forest landscapes with >20% oil palm cover where two pig and two macaque species accounted for >80% of independent camera trap detections, leaving <20% for the other 85 mammal species >1 kg considered. Establishing the population trends of pigs and macaques is imperative since they are linked to cascading impacts on the fauna and flora of local forest ecosystems, disease and human health, and economics (i.e., crop losses). The severity of potential negative cascading effects may motivate control efforts to achieve ecosystem integrity, human health and conservation objectives. Our review concludes that the rise of native generalists can be mediated by specific types of degradation, which influences the ecology and conservation of natural areas, creating both positive and detrimental impacts on intact ecosystems and human society.

Funder

Nanyang Technological University

University of Queensland

National Geographic Society

Shenzhen Government

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference203 articles.

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