生态学
地理
捕食
殖民地化
航程(航空)
生物
复合材料
材料科学
殖民地化
作者
Anthony S. Cheke,Julian P. Hume
标识
DOI:10.5040/9781472597656
摘要
The Mascarene islands in the southern Indian Ocean – Mauritius, Réunion and Rodrigues – were once home to an extraordinary range of birds and reptiles. Evolving on these isolated volcanic islands in the absence of mammalian predators or competitors, the land was dominated by giant tortoises, parrots, skinks and geckos, burrowing boas, flightless rails & herons, and of course (in Mauritius) the Dodo. Uninhabited and only discovered in the 1500s, colonisation by European settlers in the 1600s led to dramatic changes in the ecology of the islands; the birds and tortoises were slaughtered indiscriminately while introduced rats, cats, pigs and monkeys destroyed their eggs, the once-extensive forests logged, and invasive introduced plants from all over the tropics devastated the ecosystem. The now-familiar icon of extinction, the Dodo, was gone from Mauritius within 50 years of human settlement, and over the next 150 years many of the Mascarenes’ other native vertebrates followed suit.
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