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Monitoring the dead as an ecosystem indicator.

Thomas M NewsomeBrandon T BartonJulia C BuckJennifer DeBruynEmma SpencerWilliam J RipplePhilip S Barton
Published in: Ecology and evolution (2021)
Dead animal biomass (carrion) is present in all terrestrial ecosystems, and its consumption, decomposition, and dispersal can have measurable effects on vertebrates, invertebrates, microbes, parasites, plants, and soil. But despite the number of studies examining the influence of carrion on food webs, there has been no attempt to identify how general ecological processes around carrion might be used as an ecosystem indicator. We suggest that knowledge of scavenging and decomposition rates, scavenger diversity, abundance, and behavior around carrion, along with assessments of vegetation, soil, microbe, and parasite presence, can be used individually or in combination to understand food web dynamics. Monitoring carrion could also assist comparisons of ecosystem processes among terrestrial landscapes and biomes. Although there is outstanding research needed to fully integrate carrion ecology and monitoring into ecosystem management, we see great potential in using carrion as an ecosystem indicator of an intact and functional food web.
Keyphrases
  • human health
  • climate change
  • risk assessment
  • wastewater treatment
  • antibiotic resistance genes
  • case control