Large Herbivore Ecology, Ecosystem Dynamics and Conservation
Danell, K., R. Bergstrom, P. Duncan and J. Pastor, editors. 2006.
Cambridge University Press Conservation Biology Series No. 11,
Cambridge, UK, ISBN 13-978-0-521-53687-5 $76.95 (paper);
13-978-0-521-83005-2, $152.95 (hc); 506 pages.
In much of the north-eastern United States, white-tailed deer are
so plentiful that gardeners demand herds be sterilized to save crops and
politicians want deer culled to limit the spread of Lyme Disease. In
Newfoundland, park managers wonder how they can maintain native
biodiversity as moose, an alien invader, convert the boreal forest to
little hedges and meadow. Add a massive lawnmower, such as moose or deer
into an ecosystem, and one can expect dramatic changes. But, how many
moose are too many? If moose were absent, what would the forest look
like? Some plant species might disappear because moose are too many,
while other plants disappear because moose are too few. And what of the
impact on predators, songbirds, insects, soil?
These are the types of issues explored in this recent book on the
ecological role of large herbivores. This 16 chapter, 28 author book is
an overview of current understanding on the importance of large
herbivores to ecosystems. (Note: A large herbivore typically is any
mammal larger than rabbits, but, strangely, is not defined in the book).
The chapters, robust and well-referenced, cover herbivore impacts and
benefits in areas of nutrient cycling (by, for example, promoting
productivity in grasses, or decreasing it in shrubs), species richness
(by removing preferred browse species versus allowing species to persist
when competitors are browsed), predation (is there stability in
ecosystems?), restoration, frugivory, and climate change. As is common
in disturbance ecology, the disturbance--in this case,
herbivory--benefits some species while harming others. This duality is
at the forefront of biodiversity issues because diversity (richness and
evenness) is mainly a function of competition; as populations of large
herbivores fluctuate, so does the opportunity for plant species to
persist. This book contributes well to the larger issue of maintaining
biodiversity.
As welcome as the book is, it is somewhat limited in scope. The
role of other prominent herbivores, such as elephants, kangaroos, and
domestic livestock is lacking. In semi-arid parts of Africa, India and
Australia, the impact from domestic and feral goats, horses, sheep and
cattle on vegetation is immense (GLASOD 1990). Considering that most of
the large mammal species were extirpated in the last 10,000-40,0000
years (Martin and Wright 1967), a strong discussion of the historical
bias associated with community ecology and ecosystems would have been
valuable as context for the apparent role of herbivores today. As well,
a non-vertebrate ecologist might wonder why the massive impact of insect
her-bivory, both annually and during regular epizootics, is omitted in a
discussion of community structure and evolution. And, although
conservation is part of the title, there is little in the way of
endangered species management; much of the 'conservation'
refers to management of hunted and relatively common ungulates.
Another shortcoming is that the book emphasizes work on ungulate
species of the northern hemisphere, likely a result of the book being
the product of a workshop held in Sweden in 2002, and, to be fair, that
most research has been done north of the Equator. There is some work
from African (e.g., Serengeti, Namibia) and Peruvian sites, but most of
the detailed literature refers to caribou, moose and deer. All but 2 of
28 authors reside, and mainly research herbivores, in Europe or North
America.
These shortcomings do not greatly distract from the value of this
book. Overall, Large Herbivore Ecology, Ecosystem Dynamics and
Conservation provides a very good overview of large mammal impacts on
ecological processes and species in terrestrial systems, particularly
for northern temperate and boreal systems. Its principal audience is
research scientists and wildlife managers and, given the emphasis on
mechanistic models, it is not intended for a layman audience. The
writing, layout and figures are of high quality and the editors maintain
consistency across the multi-authored chapters. I would recommend this
book to ecologists interested in community structure, to land managers
dealing with overabundant herbivores and restoration, and to wildlife
scientists working on predator-prey interaction and herbivore impacts on
multiple species.
References
Global Assessment of Soil Degradation (GLASOD). 1990. United
Nations Environment Programme and Food and Agricultural Organization,
Switzerland.
Martin, P.S. and H.E. Wright, editors. 1967. Prehistoric
Extinctions: The Search for a Cause. New Haven, CT: Yale University
Press.
Reviewed by Graham Forbes, Department of Biology and the Faculty of
Forestry and Environmental Management, Director of the Sir James Dunn
Wildlife Research Center, University of New Brunswick, Canada.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Wilfrid Laurier
University Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.