Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword
- 1 Testing hypotheses about biological invasions and Charles Darwin’s two-creators rumination
- Part I Ancient invaders
- Part II Modern invaders
- 13 Invasion by woody shrubs and trees
- 14 Modern tree colonisers from Australia into the rest of the world
- 15 Failed introductions: finches from outside Australia
- 16 The skylark
- 17 Why northern hemisphere waders did not colonise the south
- 18 Weak migratory interchange by birds between Australia and Asia
- 19 Introducing a new top predator, the dingo
- 20 The European rabbit
- 21 The rise and fall of the Asian water buffalo in the monsoonal tropics of northern Australia
- 22 A critique of ecological theory and a salute to natural history
- Index
- References
21 - The rise and fall of the Asian water buffalo in the monsoonal tropics of northern Australia
from Part II - Modern invaders
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword
- 1 Testing hypotheses about biological invasions and Charles Darwin’s two-creators rumination
- Part I Ancient invaders
- Part II Modern invaders
- 13 Invasion by woody shrubs and trees
- 14 Modern tree colonisers from Australia into the rest of the world
- 15 Failed introductions: finches from outside Australia
- 16 The skylark
- 17 Why northern hemisphere waders did not colonise the south
- 18 Weak migratory interchange by birds between Australia and Asia
- 19 Introducing a new top predator, the dingo
- 20 The European rabbit
- 21 The rise and fall of the Asian water buffalo in the monsoonal tropics of northern Australia
- 22 A critique of ecological theory and a salute to natural history
- Index
- References
Summary
Australia’s native biota has evolved in the absence of large ungulates such as those found on other continents (Mulvaney and Kamminga 1999; Janis 2008). Over the past two centuries, however, large ungulate grazers and browsers have been introduced into Australia with varying degrees of success (Ridpath 1991 and references therein). Those introduced into the tropical monsoon region of northern Australia encountered year-round high day and night temperatures, strong annual cycles of high humidity and aridity, annual season rainfall resulting in annual cycles of vegetation growth and senescence, extreme variability in the start and length of the wet and dry seasons, and low-quality vegetation on very infertile tropical soils. The introductions of ungulates into these environments have provided unique opportunities for research into the dynamic relationships between feral mammals and new environments, as well as an opportunity to explore various hypotheses about invasion ecology.
The Asian water buffalo (Bovidae: Bubalus bubalis Lydekker) (or, simply, buffalo) is the most successful of seven introductions of domesticated ungulate grazers that subsequently became feral in the tropical monsoonal region in the north-central region of the continent (Ridpath 1991). From no more than 100 domesticated buffalo released into the wild in the mid-1800s, buffalo numbers grew to ~400 000 in less than 150 years, occupying an area ~224 000 km2 across the major river systems of the north colloquially referred to as the ‘Top End’ of Australia (Ridpath 1991; Skeat et al. 1996; Petty et al. 2007; Figure 21.1).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Invasion Biology and Ecological TheoryInsights from a Continent in Transformation, pp. 452 - 496Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014
References
- 7
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