1. Indirect effects of large mammalian herbivores (LMH), while much less studied than those of apex predators, are increasingly recognized to exert powerful influences on communities and ecosystems. The strength of these effects is spatiotemporally variable, and several sets of authors have suggested that they are governed in part by primary productivity. However, prior theoretical and field studies have generated conflicting results and predictions, underscoring the need for a synthetic global analysis. 2. We conducted a meta-analysis of the direction and magnitude of large mammalian herbivore-initiated indirect interactions using 67 published studies comprising 456 individual responses. We georeferenced 41 of these studies (comprising 253...
1. Large mammalian herbivores are well known to shape the structure and function of ecosystems world...
1. Simultaneous reductions in herbivore abundance and increases in nitrogen deposition have led to r...
The question whether animal populations are top-down and/or bottom-up controlled has motivated a thr...
1. Indirect effects of large mammalian herbivores (LMH), while much less studied than those of apex ...
Large mammalian herbivores are major drivers of the structure and function of terrestrial ecosystems...
The theory of “top-down” ecological regulation predicts that herbivory suppresses plant abundance, b...
Multiple consumer species frequently co-occur in the same landscape and, through effects on surround...
This is the author's peer-reviewed accepted manuscript. The original publication is copyrighted and ...
1. Even though mammalian herbivores can exert strong indirect effects on other animals by altering t...
Apex predators perform important functions that regulate ecosystems worldwide. However, little is kn...
Abstract Large, herbivorous mammals have profound effects on ecosystem structure and function and of...
Climate and land‐use change are the major drivers of global biodiversity loss. Their effects are par...
The theory of “top-down” ecological regulation predicts that herbivory suppresses plant abundance, b...
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Aim: Apex predators often exert strong, top-down effects on ecosyste...
Background: The largest terrestrial species in the order Carnivora are wide-ranging and rare because...
1. Large mammalian herbivores are well known to shape the structure and function of ecosystems world...
1. Simultaneous reductions in herbivore abundance and increases in nitrogen deposition have led to r...
The question whether animal populations are top-down and/or bottom-up controlled has motivated a thr...
1. Indirect effects of large mammalian herbivores (LMH), while much less studied than those of apex ...
Large mammalian herbivores are major drivers of the structure and function of terrestrial ecosystems...
The theory of “top-down” ecological regulation predicts that herbivory suppresses plant abundance, b...
Multiple consumer species frequently co-occur in the same landscape and, through effects on surround...
This is the author's peer-reviewed accepted manuscript. The original publication is copyrighted and ...
1. Even though mammalian herbivores can exert strong indirect effects on other animals by altering t...
Apex predators perform important functions that regulate ecosystems worldwide. However, little is kn...
Abstract Large, herbivorous mammals have profound effects on ecosystem structure and function and of...
Climate and land‐use change are the major drivers of global biodiversity loss. Their effects are par...
The theory of “top-down” ecological regulation predicts that herbivory suppresses plant abundance, b...
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Aim: Apex predators often exert strong, top-down effects on ecosyste...
Background: The largest terrestrial species in the order Carnivora are wide-ranging and rare because...
1. Large mammalian herbivores are well known to shape the structure and function of ecosystems world...
1. Simultaneous reductions in herbivore abundance and increases in nitrogen deposition have led to r...
The question whether animal populations are top-down and/or bottom-up controlled has motivated a thr...