Conservation of Australia's Forest Fauna 2004
DOI: 10.7882/fs.2004.031
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The role of nutrition in the conservation of the marsupial folivores of eucalypt forests

Abstract: Modelling distributions of arboreal and ground-dwelling mammals in relation to climate, nutrients, plant chemical defences and vegetation structure in the eucalypt forests of southeastern Australia. Forest Ecology & Management 85: 163-175.

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Cited by 59 publications
(69 citation statements)
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“…Climate change will also affect terrestrial vegetation and thus habitat quality and resource availability for many species (Hughes 2003). Changes in foliar chemistry due to elevated CO 2 are predicted to significantly affect arboreal folivores, including koalas (Kanowski 2001;Hughes 2003;Moore et al 2004;Lunney et al in press). For example, DeGabriel et al (2009) found that the reproductive success of common brushtail possums was reduced when leaves contained a high tannin content, which lowers the nitrogen available to folivores.…”
Section: Drought-driven Change In Distribution and Numbers Wildlife Rmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Climate change will also affect terrestrial vegetation and thus habitat quality and resource availability for many species (Hughes 2003). Changes in foliar chemistry due to elevated CO 2 are predicted to significantly affect arboreal folivores, including koalas (Kanowski 2001;Hughes 2003;Moore et al 2004;Lunney et al in press). For example, DeGabriel et al (2009) found that the reproductive success of common brushtail possums was reduced when leaves contained a high tannin content, which lowers the nitrogen available to folivores.…”
Section: Drought-driven Change In Distribution and Numbers Wildlife Rmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ellis et al (2010) reported similar results at Blair Athol in central Queensland, where plains vegetation comprising popular box and narrow-leaved ironbark (E. crebra) have continued to support koala populations and are the preferred food trees at the site. It appears that the key refuge habitats where koalas survive in times of environmental stress vary among locations, and this is provisionally linked to both moisture availability and soil nutrients, which in turn affect the balance between leaf nutrients and leaf toxins (Creagh 1992;Cork and Braithwaite 1996;Bryan 1997;Moore and Foley 2000;Moore et al 2004). Although there will continue to be years when numbers will expand and koalas will disperse into less optimal habitat, in southwest Queensland the maintenance of core habitat along creek lines with permanent waterholes will become increasingly critical in the coming decades.…”
Section: Drought-driven Change In Distribution and Numbers Wildlife Rmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is predicted that changes in foliar chemistry due to elevated CO 2 levels will significantly 48 affect arboreal folivores (Kanowski 2001;Lunney et al 2012; Moore et al 2004). Climate 49 change predictions for Australia indicate that droughts and heatwaves will become more 50 frequent and intense, and moisture availability will decrease (CSIRO 2007).…”
Section: Introduction 41mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, the nitrogen-to-sideroxylonal ratio did not explain the feeding decisions of brushtail possum, another marsupial folivore (Wallis et al 2002). Hence, the diet of marsupial folivores cannot be fully explained by a simple ratio (Moore et al 2004a;DeGabriel et al 2010), which might be caused by the complicated digestion process with chemicals reactions and bacterial impacts.…”
Section: E Thozetiana E Coolabah E Populnea E Melanophloia)mentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Nutrient thresholds were found to be the first restriction for the occurrence and population viability of marsupial folivores . Nitrogen appeared to be more important to the koala, because levels of nitrogen in Eucalyptus foliage are low and barely meet the requirements of the folivores, while other nutrients are found at adequate levels (Moore et al 2004a). Phenolics, a group of PSMs, act as anti-nutrition by reducing the digestibility of nutrients, especially nitrogen (Hume 2005).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%