M. Abenspergtraun, THE EFFECTS OF SHEEP-GRAZING ON THE SUBTERRANEAN TERMITE FAUNA (ISOPTERA) OF THE WESTERN-AUSTRALIAN WHEAT-BELT, Australian journal of ecology, 17(4), 1992, pp. 425-432
The majority of existing remnants of wandoo Eucalyptus capillosa woodl
and in the Western Australian wheatbelt have been grazed by sheep for
several decades and are often visibly degraded. A pilot survey was con
ducted into the effects of sheep on vegetation and soil variables, and
the abundance, diversity and species frequency of occurrence of subte
rranean termite communities. Ten 1/4 ha study plots were used for pair
ed grazed/ungrazed comparisons. Ungrazed plots had more litter mass (d
ry weight), leaf and woody litter, canopy cover (%) and soil moisture
(moisture content <1.2% across study plots); grazed plots had a higher
percentage of bare ground. Termites were as abundant, and as diverse,
in grazed as in ungrazed plots, and were equally often sampled in the
soil and surface wood. Termite species eating sound wood, decayed woo
d/debris and grass were sampled equally often, and were of equal diver
sity in sheep-grazed as in ungrazed plots. The mounds of Drepanotermes
tamminensis were more abundant in grazed plots. These findings indica
te that prolonged sheep grazing in remnants of wandoo woodland of the
Western Australian wheatbelt has had no detrimental or beneficial effe
ct on its subterranean termites.