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RESEARCH ARTICLE

The relationship between animal foraging and nutrient patchiness in south-west Australian woodland soils

Mark J. Garkaklis, J. S. Bradley and R. D. Wooller

Australian Journal of Soil Research 41(4) 665 - 673
Published: 18 July 2003

Abstract

The woylie (Bettongia penicillata) was once common and abundant over the southern third of the Australian continent. Since European settlement the range of this rat-kangaroo has become reduced by more than 97%, and until the early 1990s, only 3 small natural populations remained, all in south-western Australia. These medium-sized (c. 1 kg) marsupials create a large number of diggings as they forage for the hypogeous fruiting bodies of ectomycorrhizal fungi upon which they feed. The effect of such foraging activity on the availability of plant nutrients in the vicinity of such diggings was evaluated in simulated digging experiments. Available nitrate, ammonium, and sulfur decreased significantly 3 years after diggings were constructed and had filled in, whereas phosphorus, potassium, iron, and organic carbon remained unchanged. The results suggest that preferential water infiltration via woylie diggings leads to a decrease in those soil nutrients that are susceptible to leaching and indicates that digging vertebrates may influence the distribution of surface soil nutrients.

Keywords: ectomycorrhizal fungi, biopedturbation, mycophagy, soil heterogeneity, woodlands, soil water repellency.

https://doi.org/10.1071/SR02109

© CSIRO 2003

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