Microhabitat to landscape impacts: crested porcupine digs in the Negev Desert highlands

被引:59
作者
Alkon, PU [1 ]
机构
[1] Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Jacob Blaustein Inst Desert Res, Mitrani Ctr Desert Ecol, IL-84993 Sede Boqer, Israel
关键词
Indian crested porcupine; Hystrix indica; foraging behavior; digs; Negev Desert; habitat effects; desert ecosystems; desert landscapes;
D O I
10.1006/jare.1998.0481
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Indian crested porcupines (Hystrix indica) are adaptable, generalist herbivores with wide environmental tolerances and a large geographic range. In the arid Negev Desert highlands of southern Israel, porcupines excavate and consume subterranean organs of 18 species of geophytes and hemicryptophytes in a variety of habitats. Their foraging generates a network of direct and indirect impacts on ecological processes. Porcupine digs varied in size according to depth of forage and substrate, and new digs averaged about 8 cm in depth, and 400 cm(2) and 940 cm(3) in surface area and volume, respectively. Digging rates also differed among habitats. In hilly watersheds, highest digging rates were in soil belts supporting the greatest cover of shrubs and geophytes. Dig densities peaked at > 1 dig m(-2), impacting up to 4% of soil surfaces. Digs are temporary soil pockets (longevities of < 2 to > 10 years) that trap soil, water, organic matter, and seeds. As highly productive microhabitats compared to surrounding soil matrix, they promote the germination and growth of annual plants including some porcupine forage species. Loose soil excavated by porcupines enhances soil erosion and transport, and may substantially enhance ecosystem flows of water, soil, and nutrients. Porcupine digging may help to maintain bare rock outcrops in Negev watersheds, thereby promoting large runoff flows that produce mesic patches and plant habitats. Runoff dynamics have greatly influenced past and present human exploitation of Negev landscapes. Recent experiments indicate that porcupine digs have important properties as small-scale landscape disturbances, and as sources and sinks of critical environmental resources. Additional research is needed to better define and predict porcupine digging impacts at several ecological levels, and as a basis for realistic management of Negev habitats and landscapes. (C) 1999 Academic Press.
引用
收藏
页码:183 / 202
页数:20
相关论文
共 54 条
[1]  
Aharoni Y., 1960, ISRAEL EXPLOR J, V10, P23
[2]  
Aharoni Y., 1960, ISRAEL EXPLOR J, V10, P97
[3]   SEASONAL ENERGY-REQUIREMENTS AND WATER INTAKES OF INDIAN CRESTED PORCUPINES (HYSTRIX-INDICA) IN CAPTIVITY [J].
ALKON, PU ;
DEGEN, AA ;
COHEN, A ;
POLLAK, H .
JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY, 1986, 67 (02) :333-342
[4]   POTATOES AND THE NUTRITIONAL ECOLOGY OF CRESTED PORCUPINES IN A DESERT BIOME [J].
ALKON, PU ;
SALTZ, D .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 1985, 22 (03) :727-737
[5]   PATTERNS OF CRESTED PORCUPINE (HYSTRIX-INDICA) DAMAGE TO CULTIVATED POTATOES [J].
ALKON, PU ;
SALTZ, D .
AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, 1985, 14 (3-4) :171-183
[6]   INFLUENCE OF SEASON AND MOONLIGHT ON TEMPORAL-ACTIVITY PATTERNS OF INDIAN CRESTED PORCUPINES (HYSTRIX-INDICA) [J].
ALKON, PU ;
SALTZ, D .
JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY, 1988, 69 (01) :71-80
[7]   TOWARDS AN ACOUSTIC BIOTELEMETRY SYSTEM FOR ANIMAL BEHAVIOR STUDIES [J].
ALKON, PU ;
COHEN, Y ;
JORDAN, PA .
JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT, 1989, 53 (03) :658-662
[8]   CRESTED PORCUPINE DIGS IN THE NEGEV DESERT HIGHLANDS - PATTERNS OF DENSITY, SIZE, AND LONGEVITY [J].
ALKON, PU ;
OLSVIGWHITTAKER, L .
JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS, 1989, 17 (01) :83-95
[9]  
[Anonymous], 1988, Dynamic Modeling in Behavioral Ecology. Monographs in Behavior and Ecology
[10]   Annual plant community responses to density of small-scale soil disturbances in the Negev Desert of Israel [J].
Boeken, B ;
Lipchin, C ;
Gutterman, Y ;
van Rooyen, N .
OECOLOGIA, 1998, 114 (01) :106-117