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Pacific Conservation Biology Pacific Conservation Biology Society
A journal dedicated to conservation and wildlife management in the Pacific region.
RESEARCH ARTICLE

The impacts of Sambar Cervus unicolor on the threatened Shiny Nematolepis Nematolepis wilsonii

Ami Bennett and Graeme Coulson

Pacific Conservation Biology 16(4) 251 - 260
Published: 2010

Abstract

Shiny Nematolepis Nematolepis wilsonii is a small understorey tree endemic to Victoria, south east Australia. The species is listed as threatened due to its limited distribution and low abundance. The sole known population, of approximately 400 metres individuals, is located in the Yarra Ranges National Park, Victoria. Paired exclusion plots were erected to investigate the impact of antler rubbing and thrashing activities of Sambar Cervus unicolor on Shiny Nematolepis. Sambar rubbing activities removed, on average, over half the circumference of bark down to the cambium of mature trees. Rubbing damage covered a range of tree sizes, with rubbed individuals in significantly poorer health and exhibiting 19% less relative foliage cover than non-rubbed individuals. Saplings selected by Sambar for thrashing had a significantly greater stem diameter and were most commonly situated beside the road. Other forms of damage to Shiny Nematolepis included storm events and biting by Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo Calyptorhynchus funereus, but Sambar pose an added threat, which is likely to result in further decline of this threatened population.

https://doi.org/10.1071/PC110251

© CSIRO 2010

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