Article
Details
Citation
Bush ER, Whytock RC, Bahaa-el-din L, Bourgeois S, Bunnefeld N, Cardoso AW, Dikangadissi JT, Dimbonda P, Dimoto E, Edzang Ndong J, Jeffery KJ, Lehmann D, Makaga L, Momboua B, Momont LRW, Tutin CEG, White LJT, Whittaker A & Abernethy K (2020) Long-term collapse in fruit availability threatens Central African forest megafauna. Science, 370 (6521), pp. 1219-1222. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abc7791
Abstract
Afrotropical forests host many of the world’s remaining megafauna, but even here they are confined to areas where direct human influences are low. We use a rare long-term dataset of tree reproduction and a photographic database of forest elephants to assess food availability and body condition of an emblematic megafauna species at Lopé National Park, Gabon. We show an 81% decline in fruiting over a 32-year period (1986-2018) and an 11% decline in body condition of fruit-dependent forest elephants from 2008-2018. Fruit famine in one of the last strongholds for African forest elephants should raise concern for the ability of this species and other fruit-dependent megafauna to persist in the long-term, with consequences for broader ecosystem and biosphere functioning.
Journal
Science: Volume 370, Issue 6521
Status | Published |
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Funders | European Research Council, The Gabonese National Park Agency, University of Oxford's Hertford College Mortimer-May Scholarship, The 我要吃瓜's Collaborative Impact Scholarship and EU 11eme FED ECOFAC6 programme in Gabon |
Publication date | 04/12/2020 |
Publication date online | 24/09/2020 |
Date accepted by journal | 10/09/2020 |
URL | |
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Publisher | American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) |
ISSN | 0036-8075 |
eISSN | 1095-9203 |
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Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences
Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences
Associate Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences