Agritrop
Accueil

Can rewilding with giant tortoises increase woody habitat and limit fire across Madagascar's grasslands?

Joseph Grant S., Rakotoarivelo Andrinajoro R., Pedrono Miguel, Seymour Colleen L.. 2024. Can rewilding with giant tortoises increase woody habitat and limit fire across Madagascar's grasslands?. Plants, People, Planet, 6 (3) : 570-586.

Article de revue ; Article de revue à facteur d'impact Revue en libre accès total
[img]
Prévisualisation
Version publiée - Anglais
Sous licence Licence Creative Commons.
613161.pdf

Télécharger (2MB) | Prévisualisation

Résumé : Grasslands with little tree cover today comprise 80% of Madagascar's habitat. Determining their extent at human settlement can guide ecological restoration and enhance human well-being, so the 2021 Malagasy Grassy Biomes Workshop identified the role of extinct megafauna in determining habitat as a critical knowledge gap. Using a systematic literature review, combined with extracted datasets, we address this, examining anticipated habitat selection by giant tortoises following reintroduction to Madagascar (where the Aldabran giant tortoise, Aldabrachelys gigantea, provides ecological functions lost when A. abrupta and A. grandidieri went extinct). When comparing current and historical tortoise selection of habitat across the Mascarenes and Aldabra with contemporary Malagasy habitat, areas in Madagascar where giant tortoises historically ranged, today have a significantly different habitat composition to the forested habitat that supported giant tortoises on other islands. Dietary 13C isotope ratios show that Malagasy Aldabrachelys and Mascarene tortoises were mixed feeders, with diets often dominated by C3 woody intake, but never by C4 grasses. Across systems, giant tortoises required and selected, tree-rich habitat mosaics, different to current pastoralist fire-selected Malagasy grasslands characterized by sparse tree cover. Furthermore, Aldabran Aldabrachelys tortoise turf, restricted to small areas (large tracts of unshaded vegetation present physiological challenges to Aldabrachelys' survival), is compositionally different to Malagasy and African obligate C4 grazing lawns. Ecological, palaeoecological, geomorphological and molecular evidence support a lost Malagasy habitat mosaic where hippo and tortoise diets were C3-dominated, because they inhabited closed-canopy systems, with abutting open-canopy areas harbouring endemic-rich, C4 grassy understories and limited grasslands. The review suggests that rewilding with A. gigantea will help restore ecological functions, productivity and landscape-scale degradation lost through cattlebased pastoralism, re-establish tree-rich habitat mosaics, and mitigate against frequent bushfires, benefiting biodiversity and humans at multiple scales.

Mots-clés Agrovoc : habitat, biodiversité, paléoécologie, herbage, écologie animale, zébu, régime alimentaire, Tortue terrestre, pastoralisme, taxonomie, restauration environnementale, comportement alimentaire

Mots-clés géographiques Agrovoc : Madagascar, La Réunion

Mots-clés libres : Aldabrachelys, Forest restoration, Landscape degradation, Malagasy grassland, Mascarene deforestation, Rewilding, Tapia woodland, Tortoise turf

Auteurs et affiliations

  • Joseph Grant S., UCT (ZAF) - auteur correspondant
  • Rakotoarivelo Andrinajoro R., University of the Free State (ZAF)
  • Pedrono Miguel, CIRAD-BIOS-UMR ASTRE (FRA)
  • Seymour Colleen L., UCT (ZAF)

Source : Cirad-Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/613161/)

Voir la notice (accès réservé à Agritrop) Voir la notice (accès réservé à Agritrop)

[ Page générée et mise en cache le 2025-06-07 ]