Dear colleagues,

We write to draw your attention to the organized oral session, "Ancient 
Extinctions & Modern Experiments: Ecological Effects of Adding & Removing 
Megaherbivores from the Landscape," which will be convening at the Ecological 
Society of America annual meeting in San Jose (August 5-10, this session is 
Monday afternoon, August 6). Several slots are open so we encourage anyone 
interested to submit an abstract (due March 1st). Otherwise, we encourage you 
to attend what promises to be an exciting session.

Session description follows end of email.

Thank you for your interest, and apologies for cross-posting.

Respectfully,

Jacquelyn Gill
Jack Williams

Department of Geography
University of Wisconsin

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SESSION DESCRIPTION

Successful conservation and restoration efforts require an understanding of the 
drivers of ecosystem dynamics. Often, conservationists seek to return highly 
altered landscapes to a “pristine” state that may or may not have existed in 
the past and is often poorly understood. With increased human impact, this 
typically requires intensive management under disturbance regimes that are 
quite different than those of the past. Understanding the role of 
megaherbivores in ecosystem dynamics is particularly challenging, because in 
many cases key species are long absent from the landscape. In response, some 
have suggested reintroducing locally extinct species or their closest analogs 
to extirpated groups. Large mammals are particularly susceptible to extinction, 
and the megafauna has experienced disproportionate species losses since the 
last ice age. What impact did local and global megaherbivore extirpation have 
on the evolution of landscapes during the early Holocene? Would changes i
n modern herbivore biodiversity have a similar impact on vegetation? How would 
such changes influence local fire regime, soil properties, or other factors 
that could contribute to ecological cascades?

Recent publications on herbivore-plant dynamics, particularly long-term 
exclusion studies, indicate the importance of megafauna to the maintenance of 
many natural habitats. Megaherbivores often play a keystone role in modern 
ecosystems, which conservationists must consider if they are to implement a 
systems-based approach. One proposed strategy, “re-wilding,” involves 
reintroducing herbivores to regions where now-extinct species once lived. 
Research assessing the effectiveness of such strategies should include both 
modern and paleoecological perspectives. Paleoecological data can offer spatial 
and temporal perspectives not possible with modern process studies, and can 
address the rate and extent of landscape change following a particularly 
dramatic example of selective extinction during the late Pleistocene. 
Paleoenvironmental proxies allow reconstruction of megafaunal presence and 
ancient fire regimes, and advances in stable isotope analysis allow 
reconstruction of diet and
migratory patterns of extinct species. Better integration of modern landscape 
ecology and paleoecology offers significant contributions to future restoration 
efforts. Modern ecologists can offer direct experimental and observational 
evidence of the impacts of herbivore presence on the landscape; paleoecologists 
can contribute a broader spatiotemporal perspective. Whether or not 
megaherbivores will ultimately play a role in restoration efforts, an 
understanding of their impact and ecology is critical to the development of 
conservation strategies.

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