The effects of lethal control on the conservation values of Canis lupus dingo

The need to conserve terrestrial apex predators is internationally recognized because most of these predators are relatively rare. Derived from the grey wolf (Canis lupus), dingoes (C. l. dingo) are the largest terrestrial predator in Australia, but they are not threatened by decreasing numbers per...

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Main Author: Allen, B. L.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Nova Science Publishers 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q3840/the-effects-of-lethal-control-on-the-conservation-values-of-canis-lupus-dingo
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spelling ftusqland:oai:research.usq.edu.au:q3840 2023-05-15T15:49:35+02:00 The effects of lethal control on the conservation values of Canis lupus dingo Allen, B. L. 2012 https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q3840/the-effects-of-lethal-control-on-the-conservation-values-of-canis-lupus-dingo unknown Nova Science Publishers Allen, B. L. 2012. "The effects of lethal control on the conservation values of Canis lupus dingo." Maia, A. P. and Crussi, H. F. (ed.) Wolves: biology, behavior and conservation. New York, United States. Nova Science Publishers. pp. 79-108 Apex predator Canis lupus dingo Hybridization Lethal control Mesopredator release Sodium monofluoroacetate (1080) edited PeerReviewed 2012 ftusqland 2023-01-03T12:41:12Z The need to conserve terrestrial apex predators is internationally recognized because most of these predators are relatively rare. Derived from the grey wolf (Canis lupus), dingoes (C. l. dingo) are the largest terrestrial predator in Australia, but they are not threatened by decreasing numbers per se. Rather, hybridization with domestic dogs is changing the genetic integrity of dingo populations despite their widespread and common occurrence. Additionally, maintaining the role of dingoes in suppressing mesopredators and indirectly protecting faunal biodiversity is promoted as a key dingo conservation goal. By extension, lethal dingo control programs aimed at mitigating livestock losses have come under increased scrutiny for their perceived negative effects on biodiversity conservation. This study discusses the effects of lethal control on these two conservation values of dingoes using historical and contemporary datasets from arid Australia as an example. From historical data, it is shown that baiting typically occurred infrequently, though periods of spatially and temporally intensive control has the ability to reduce dingo abundance when conducted repeatedly over many years. From contemporary data, it is shown that sporadic and spatially restricted dingo control practices have little effect on the persistence of dingoes. It is concluded that contemporary dingo control practices may provide a catalyst for localized hybridization, but the ecosystem function of dingoes is unlikely to be altered by current control practices in any significant way. Ongoing lethal dingo control may still be practiced in an ecologically conservative manner while continuing to protect livestock production values. Text Canis lupus University of Southern Queensland: USQ ePrints
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southern Queensland: USQ ePrints
op_collection_id ftusqland
language unknown
topic Apex predator
Canis lupus dingo
Hybridization
Lethal control
Mesopredator release
Sodium monofluoroacetate (1080)
spellingShingle Apex predator
Canis lupus dingo
Hybridization
Lethal control
Mesopredator release
Sodium monofluoroacetate (1080)
Allen, B. L.
The effects of lethal control on the conservation values of Canis lupus dingo
topic_facet Apex predator
Canis lupus dingo
Hybridization
Lethal control
Mesopredator release
Sodium monofluoroacetate (1080)
description The need to conserve terrestrial apex predators is internationally recognized because most of these predators are relatively rare. Derived from the grey wolf (Canis lupus), dingoes (C. l. dingo) are the largest terrestrial predator in Australia, but they are not threatened by decreasing numbers per se. Rather, hybridization with domestic dogs is changing the genetic integrity of dingo populations despite their widespread and common occurrence. Additionally, maintaining the role of dingoes in suppressing mesopredators and indirectly protecting faunal biodiversity is promoted as a key dingo conservation goal. By extension, lethal dingo control programs aimed at mitigating livestock losses have come under increased scrutiny for their perceived negative effects on biodiversity conservation. This study discusses the effects of lethal control on these two conservation values of dingoes using historical and contemporary datasets from arid Australia as an example. From historical data, it is shown that baiting typically occurred infrequently, though periods of spatially and temporally intensive control has the ability to reduce dingo abundance when conducted repeatedly over many years. From contemporary data, it is shown that sporadic and spatially restricted dingo control practices have little effect on the persistence of dingoes. It is concluded that contemporary dingo control practices may provide a catalyst for localized hybridization, but the ecosystem function of dingoes is unlikely to be altered by current control practices in any significant way. Ongoing lethal dingo control may still be practiced in an ecologically conservative manner while continuing to protect livestock production values.
format Text
author Allen, B. L.
author_facet Allen, B. L.
author_sort Allen, B. L.
title The effects of lethal control on the conservation values of Canis lupus dingo
title_short The effects of lethal control on the conservation values of Canis lupus dingo
title_full The effects of lethal control on the conservation values of Canis lupus dingo
title_fullStr The effects of lethal control on the conservation values of Canis lupus dingo
title_full_unstemmed The effects of lethal control on the conservation values of Canis lupus dingo
title_sort effects of lethal control on the conservation values of canis lupus dingo
publisher Nova Science Publishers
publishDate 2012
url https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q3840/the-effects-of-lethal-control-on-the-conservation-values-of-canis-lupus-dingo
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_relation Allen, B. L. 2012. "The effects of lethal control on the conservation values of Canis lupus dingo." Maia, A. P. and Crussi, H. F. (ed.) Wolves: biology, behavior and conservation. New York, United States. Nova Science Publishers. pp. 79-108
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