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Demonising the dingo : how much wild dogma is enough?

journal contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by M Letnic, M Crowther, C Dickman, Euan RitchieEuan Ritchie
The roles that top predators play in regulating the structure and function of ecosystems have long been controversial. This is particularly the case when predators pose adverse risks for human life and/or economic interests. The critique of literature on dingoes and their ecological roles in Australia provided by Allen et al. (2011) shows that top predators remain a potentially polarising issue. In opposition to Allen et al. we argue that these widespread patterns of species’ abundances, attributed to the effects of dingoes and evident at scales ranging from the foraging behaviour of individuals through to continental scale patterns of species abundances, constitute strong support for the mesopredator release hypothesis and provide evidence that dingoes benefit biodiversity conservation by inducing community wide trophic cascades. Harnessing the positive ecological effects of dingoes while at the same time minimising their impacts on agriculture is a major socio-political challenge in Australia [Current Zoology 57 (5): 668-670].

History

Journal

Current zoology

Volume

57

Issue

5

Pagination

668 - 670

Publisher

Current Zoology Editorial Office

Location

Beijing, China

ISSN

1674-5507

Language

eng

Publication classification

C4 Letter or note

Copyright notice

2011, Current Zoology