C. Mcarthur et al., Preferences, selection and damage to seedlings under changing availabilityby two marsupial herbivores, FOREST ECOL, 139(1-3), 2000, pp. 157-173
Preferences for and damage to seedlings used in commercial forestry in Tasm
ania, Australia, by brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula) and Tasmanian
pademelons (Thylogale billardierii) were measured in paired-species feedin
g trials with captive animals. Both possums and pademelons consistently ate
foliage more than stem for all seedling species examined. Possums showed s
ignificant interspecific foliage preferences more often than pademelons and
they often had opposite preferences to pademelons. For possums, Eucalyptus
nitens was one of the most preferred species, whereas for pademelons, Acac
ia melanoxylon and Pinus radiata were preferred. At low damage levels, poss
ums ate the apical bud of seedlings more frequently than pademelons. A non-
linear regression model was developed that describes the depletion of two f
ood types by herbivores. A conditional selection index comparing two plant
types was derived from the model, allowing selection to be quantified at an
y stage in the resource depletion process. Results are discussed in relatio
n to the per capita impact of the two herbivore species, the development of
non-lethal methods for managing browsing damage and the use of indicator p
lant species for triggering management options. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B
.V. All rights reserved.