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Factors affecting the distribution and abundance of Western grey kangaroos (Macropus fuliginosus) and euros (M. robustus) in a fragmented landscape

✍ Scribed by G. W. Arnold; J. R. Weeldenburg; V. M. Ng


Book ID
104645414
Publisher
Springer
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Weight
776 KB
Volume
10
Category
Article
ISSN
0921-2973

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✦ Synopsis


All the remnants of native vegetation in a 1680 km 2 area of the central wheatbelt of Western Australia were assessed for use by two species of kangaroo (Western grey kangaroo Macropus fuliginosus and euro M. robustus). Use was determined from faecal pellet density. Densities over large areas (100 km 2) varied with the amount of residual native vegetation in the area. The less the vegetation the lower was the faecal density, indicating that increased separation between remnants has led, over the 50-70 years since fragmentation, to lower kangaroo densities.

The densities of kangaroos in 152 individual remnants of > 2 ha were examined in relation to their physical attributes (e.g. area, edge length, distance to nearest remnant, presence of linkages and the vegetation types present), and to an index of isolation from human disturbance. Few remnants < 2 ha were used by kangaroos. Canonical discriminant analysis showed that separation of remnants without kangaroos from those with kangaroos was associated with many of the attributes. Of these, the numbers of vegetation types and their proportions and the degree of isolation from human disturbance were of greatest importance. Regression analyses were done to obtain predictors of densities within remnants grouped according to the kangaroo species using the remnants. These showed that the importance of attributes differed for different groupings. Isolation from human disturbance was the most important factor for remnants that had either species, but not for the larger ones that had both species. For euros, density increased with the rank of the linkage to other remnants and decreased with the percentage of the remnant in open woodland. For Western grey kangaroos, rank for distance to nearest remnant was significant. Since the study area is representative of a much larger area, the findings should have wide applicability.