By Charles Q.
Choi, LiveScience Contributor October 22, 2013 7:04 PM
Hunters are often thought of as bad for wildlife, but
scientists have recently found that Aboriginal hunters in Australia
actually boosted certain lizard populations by improving the locales where the
reptiles live.
Scientists investigated the Western
Desert of Australia , where many native
species have declined or gone extinct in the past century. But paradoxically,
numbers of the sand monitor lizard (Varanus gouldii) — reptiles that weigh
about 1 lb. (0.45 kilograms) and feed on smaller
lizards, insects and arachnids
— are higher where Aboriginal hunting is most prevalent.
Researchers investigated the Martu, an Aboriginal
group that lives in the Little Sandy Desert in western Australia . The Martu use fires to
burn patches of grasslands to help flush out prey — such as sand monitor
lizards and other reptiles, as well as small mammals such as rufous hare
wallabies — from their burrows.
More than half of the time the Martu spend foraging is
devoted to hunting sand monitor lizards. The investigators followed the Martu
people on about 350 foraging trips over the course of about a decade.
"It is a vast, vast desert and a very severe environment,
where you have a suite of the most poisonous snakes in the world— but
with Martu, it's a very welcoming one," said study author Doug Bird, an
ecological anthropologist at Stanford University in California .
"If you don't know what you're doing, and if you're not with folks who
know how to really handle themselves out there, it would be a very, very
difficult place — but it's also incredibly beautiful."
The scientists found that the fires the Martu set
eventually created small patches of regrowth, thus increasing the diversity of
the landscape. The more diverse landscape, in turn, was able to accommodate a
wider variety of wildlife, leading to greater biodiversity and more stable
populations.
"It's a counterintuitive result: The more Martu
hunt, the more prey there are to hunt," Bird told LiveScience. "It
flies in the face of a lot of common ways of thinking about the role of people
in ecosystems."
In places where Martu hunting was the heaviest, there
were nearly twice as many lizard sites as there were where Martu hunting was
the lightest. In places where there were no hunters, lightning-triggered fires
spread over vast distances instead of the relatively small patches resulting
from Martu burning. This made the landscape less patchy and sand monitor
lizards less prevalent.
The investigators noted that Aboriginal hunters have
inhabited the arid desert grasslands that cover much of Australia for
at least the past 36,000 years, so the hunters may have become key parts of the
ecosystems there over the course of millennia. The researchers suggested that
the loss of Aboriginal fire-based hunting in the mid-20th century may have
contributed to the extinction of 10 to 20 native desert animal species and the
sharp decline of more than 40 others.
"Martu insist that they don't manage or control
their landscapes, but that they're fundamentally a part of those
ecosystems," Bird said.
"There's a lesson here of the importance of these
remote indigenous communities when it comes to
the role they play in maintaining healthy ecosystems and the way in which
ecosystems support remote communities," Bird added. "That's really
not at all recognized in economic or educational policy throughout Australia ,
where things like foraging are generally seen as a deficient way of making a
living, so remote Aboriginals are often cast as being
unproductive and unemployed. It turns out the work Martu do provides tremendous
public goods in the form of supporting the health of a vast tract of landscape
in the Western Desert
of Australia ."
The scientists detail their findings online Oct.
23 in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
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