Empirical tests of harvest-induced body-size evolution along a geographic gradient in Australian macropods

Date

2015

Authors

Prowse, T.
Correll, R.
Johnson, C.
Prideaux, G.
Brook, B.

Editors

Lele, S.

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Journal of Animal Ecology, 2015; 84(1):299-309

Statement of Responsibility

Thomas A.A. Prowse, Rachel A. Correll, Christopher N. Johnson, Gavin J. Prideaux, and Barry W. Brook

Conference Name

Abstract

Life-history theory predicts the progressive dwarfing of animal populations that are subjected to chronic mortality stress, but the evolutionary impact of harvesting terrestrial herbivores has seldom been tested. In Australia, marsupials of the genus Macropus (kangaroos and wallabies) are subjected to size-selective commercial harvesting. Mathematical modelling suggests that harvest quotas (c. 10-20% of population estimates annually) could be driving body-size evolution in these species. We tested this hypothesis for three harvested macropod species with continental-scale distributions. To do so, we measured more than 2000 macropod skulls sourced from wildlife collections spanning the last 130 years. We analysed these data using spatial Bayesian models that controlled for the age and sex of specimens as well as environmental drivers and island effects. We found no evidence for the hypothesized decline in body size for any species; rather, models that fit trend terms supported minor body size increases over time. This apparently counterintuitive result is consistent with reduced mortality due to a depauperate predator guild and increased primary productivity of grassland vegetation following European settlement in Australia. Spatial patterns in macropod body size supported the heat dissipation limit and productivity hypotheses proposed to explain geographic body-size variation (i.e. skull size increased with decreasing summer maximum temperature and increasing rainfall, respectively). There is no empirical evidence that size-selective harvesting has driven the evolution of smaller body size in Australian macropods. Bayesian models are appropriate for investigating the long-term impact of human harvesting because they can impute missing data, fit nonlinear growth models and account for non-random spatial sampling inherent in wildlife collections.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

© 2014 The Authors. Journal of Animal Ecology © 2014 British Ecological Society

License

Call number

Persistent link to this record