Small herbivores are true victims
- January 12, 2024
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
No Comments
Small herbivores are true victims
Subject: Environment
Section: Species in news
- India’s natural areas are facing extensive threats, with land-use changes leading to fragmented, depleted, and invaded ecosystems.
- Two-thirds of these spaces are now grappling with the invasion of alien plants, posing a significant risk to biodiversity.
- Herbivores, both wild and domestic, are particularly vulnerable as they rely on these landscapes for survival.
- While invasive plants are not a primary food source for herbivores, some large grazers, such as rhinoceroses and Indian bison, have been observed consuming them, especially during dry seasons.
- Megaherbivores, with their large size and varied diets, play a crucial role in controlling invasive plants in certain regions, but in drier areas, the invasion creates challenges for native plants.
- Smaller and medium-sized herbivores, heavily reliant on vegetation decimated by invasive plants, face the dilemma of starvation or consuming invaders, with potential health issues documented.
- Protected areas in India are implementing measures such as managed grasslands and periodic removal of invasive plants to provide temporary havens for herbivores. However, a long-term solution requires large-scale, science-driven restoration of native ecosystems.
Megaherbivores:
- Megaherbivores are large herbivores that can exceed 1,000 kg (2,200 lb) in weight. They first appeared 300 million years ago in the early Permian, in the form of synapsids.
- They were then replaced by megaherbivorous dinosaurs that went extinct in the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction event.
- After this period, small mammalian species evolved into large herbivores in the Paleogene.
- During the Quaternary Extinction Event,megaherbivores disappeared on most continents on Earth.
- Recent megaherbivores include elephants, rhinos, hippos, and giraffes.
- There are nine extant species of megaherbivores living in Africa and Asia. The African bush elephant is the largest extant species.
- Extant megaherbivores are keystone species in their environment. They defoliate the landscape and spread a greater number of seeds than other frugivores.
- Extant megaherbivores, like most large mammals, are K-selected species. They are characterized by their large size, relative immunity to predation, their effect on plant species, and their dietary tolerance.
Source: DTE