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Climate-driven animal mass mortality events: is there a role for scavengers?

Version 2 2024-06-03, 00:00
Version 1 2023-08-24, 04:33
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 00:00 authored by Philip BartonPhilip Barton, Anna Reboldi, Stefanie Bonat, Patricia Mateo-Tomas, Thomas M Newsome
SummaryAnimal mass mortality events (MMEs) will increase with weather and climate extremes. MMEs can add significant stress to ecosystems through extraordinary nutrient pulses or contribute to potential disease transmission risks. Given their efficient removal of carrion biomass from landscapes, we argue here for the potential of scavenger guilds to be a key nature-based solution to mitigating MME effects. However, we caution that scavenger guilds alone will not be a silver bullet. It is critical for further research to identify how the composition of scavenger guilds and the magnitude of MMEs will determine when scavengers will buffer the impacts of such events on ecosystems and when intervention might be required. Some MMEs are too large for scavengers to remove efficiently, and there is a risk of MMEs subsidizing pest species, altering nutrient cycling or leading to disease spread. Prioritizing native scavenger taxa in conservation management policies may help to boost ecosystem resilience through preserving their key ecological services. This should be part of a multi-pronged approach to MME mitigation that combines scavenger conservation with practices such as carcass dispersal or removal when exceeding a threshold quantity. Policymakers are urged to identify such thresholds and to recognize both the insects and the vertebrate scavengers that could act as allies for mitigating the emerging problem of climate-driven MMEs.

History

Related Materials

Location

Cambridge, Eng.

Language

English

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Environmental Conservation

Volume

50

Article number

PII S0376892922000388

Pagination

1-6

ISSN

0376-8929

eISSN

1469-4387

Issue

1

Publisher

Cambridge University Press