Work on the impacts of herbivores on ecosystems has traditionally focused on aboveground effects, but a growing number of ecologists are beginning to consider how herbivores affect belowground organisms and processes. Human activity has caused considerable changes in densities of mammalian herbivores throughout the world, through the introduction of herbivores to new regions, the creation of conditions that promote high herbivore densities, and the reduction of their population sizes, sometimes to the point of extinction. These human influences on high mammal densities can have major effects on the decomposer subsystem. Whether these effects are positive or negative depends on the mechanisms involved: for example, whether the changes are in...
1. Herbivores influence the structure and composition of terrestrial plant communities. However, res...
Natural disturbances historically created structurally diverse patterns across the landscape, and la...
Understanding changes in species distributions is essential to disentangle the mechanisms that drive...
Large mammalian herbivores are major drivers of the structure and function of terrestrial ecosystems...
Understanding how terrestrial ecosystems function requires a combined aboveground–belowground approa...
Global landscapes are changing due to human activities with consequences for both biodiversity and e...
Fossorial herbivores are common in Eurasia, North and South America, and Africa, particularly in ari...
Large mammalian herbivores occupy half of the earth's land surface and are important both ecological...
Mammalian herbivores can have pronounced effects on plant diversity but are currently declining in m...
The question whether animal populations are top-down and/or bottom-up controlled has motivated a thr...
Mammalian herbivores can have pronounced effects on plant diversity but are currently declining in m...
The current extinction crisis is caused primarily by human impacts upon wild populations. Large carn...
Global landscapes are changing due to human activities with consequences for both biodiversity and e...
Large wild herbivores are crucial to ecosystems and human societies. We highlight the 74 largest ter...
Large herbivores are major drivers of community structure and function in many terrestrial systems. ...
1. Herbivores influence the structure and composition of terrestrial plant communities. However, res...
Natural disturbances historically created structurally diverse patterns across the landscape, and la...
Understanding changes in species distributions is essential to disentangle the mechanisms that drive...
Large mammalian herbivores are major drivers of the structure and function of terrestrial ecosystems...
Understanding how terrestrial ecosystems function requires a combined aboveground–belowground approa...
Global landscapes are changing due to human activities with consequences for both biodiversity and e...
Fossorial herbivores are common in Eurasia, North and South America, and Africa, particularly in ari...
Large mammalian herbivores occupy half of the earth's land surface and are important both ecological...
Mammalian herbivores can have pronounced effects on plant diversity but are currently declining in m...
The question whether animal populations are top-down and/or bottom-up controlled has motivated a thr...
Mammalian herbivores can have pronounced effects on plant diversity but are currently declining in m...
The current extinction crisis is caused primarily by human impacts upon wild populations. Large carn...
Global landscapes are changing due to human activities with consequences for both biodiversity and e...
Large wild herbivores are crucial to ecosystems and human societies. We highlight the 74 largest ter...
Large herbivores are major drivers of community structure and function in many terrestrial systems. ...
1. Herbivores influence the structure and composition of terrestrial plant communities. However, res...
Natural disturbances historically created structurally diverse patterns across the landscape, and la...
Understanding changes in species distributions is essential to disentangle the mechanisms that drive...