Date: February 17, 2019
Source: Penn State
Australia
has the highest rate of mammal extinction in the world. Resettlement of
indigenous communities resulted in the spread of invasive species, the absence
of human-set fires, and a general cascade in the interconnected food web that
led to the largest mammalian extinction event ever recorded. In this case, the
absence of direct human activity on the landscape may be the cause of the
extinctions, according to a Penn State anthropologist.
"I was
motivated by the mystery that has occurred in the last 50 years in
Australia," said Rebecca Bliege Bird, professor of anthropology, Penn
State. "The extinction of small-bodied mammals does not follow the same
pattern we usually see with people changing the landscape and animals
disappearing."
Australia's
Western Desert, where Bird and her team work, is the homeland of the Martu, the
traditional owners of a large region of the Little and Great Sandy Desert.
During the mid-20th century, many Martu groups were first contacted in the
process of establishing a missile testing range and resettled in missions and
pastoral stations beyond their desert home. During their hiatus from the land,
many native animals went extinct.
In the
1980s, many families returned to the desert to reestablish their land rights.
They returned to livelihoods centered around hunting and gathering. Today, in a
hybrid economy of commercial and customary resources, many Martu continue their
traditional subsistence and burning practices in support of cultural
commitments to their country.
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