Predators protect the forest.Scientists Continue to investigate the role of predatory carnivores as an indispensable element in the "green world hypothesis." The basic idea is that predators "protect" plants by controlling the population of herbivores like deer or elk elk, name applied to several large members of the deer family. It most properly designates the largest member of the family, Alces alces, found in the northern regions of Eurasia and North America. In North America this animal is called moose. , and by creating a climate of fear, which prevents these herd animals from staying in any one place too long (see "The Ecology of Fear," Currents, March/April 2006). In a recently published study supported by the National Science Foundation, researchers were afforded a rare experimental opportunity when a man-made Venezuelan reservoir created in 1986 resulted in hundreds of islands, some inhabited in·hab·it·ed adj. Having inhabitants; lived in: a sparsely inhabited plain. Adj. 1. inhabited - having inhabitants; lived in; "the inhabited regions of the earth" by predators, others predator-free. Fourteen study sites were monitored, and nine were islands populated pop·u·late tr.v. pop·u·lat·ed, pop·u·lat·ing, pop·u·lates 1. To supply with inhabitants, as by colonization; people. 2. exclusively by herbivores. The remaining sites were on the mainland or on islands with predators. In 1997, the predator-free islands had a small sapling density 37 percent that of large land masses; by 2002, that ratio had dropped further, to 25 percent. "The take-home message is clear: the presence of a viable carnivore carnivore (kär`nəvôr'), term commonly applied to any animal whose diet consists wholly or largely of animal matter. In animal systematics it refers to members of the mammalian order Carnivora (see Chordata). guild is fundamental to maintaining biodiversity biodiversity: see biological diversity. biodiversity Quantity of plant and animal species found in a given environment. Sometimes habitat diversity (the variety of places where organisms live) and genetic diversity (the variety of traits expressed ," concludes the study, which was led by Duke University environmental professor John Terborgh. CONTACT: Duke University, (919)684-8111, www.duke.edu. |
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