New study disputes strong Yellowstone wolf trophic cascade

A recent peer-reviewed analysis has challenged claims that wolf recovery in Yellowstone National Park triggered a dramatic ecosystem-wide change. Researchers argue that a 2025 study overstated the effects on willow growth due to flawed methods.

The analysis, published in Global Ecology and Conservation, reexamined data from earlier research and found no support for a park-wide surge in willow growth after wolves returned.

Lead author Dr. Daniel MacNulty of Utah State University said the original conclusions relied on circular reasoning in statistical models that used plant height both to calculate and predict willow volume.

Co-author Dr. David Cooper of Colorado State University noted that effects appear modest and vary by location, influenced by factors like hydrology and browsing.

The new work contrasts with the 2025 study by Ripple et al. and aligns more closely with findings from Hobbs et al. in 2024 that reported only weak trophic cascade effects.

相关文章

Illustration of a coyote in Puget Sound with tapeworm parasite overlay for news on parasite detection.
AI 生成的图像

Disease-causing tapeworm found in Puget Sound coyotes in first confirmed West Coast wild detection

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像 事实核查

University of Washington researchers report finding the parasitic tapeworm Echinococcus multilocularis in more than one-third of coyotes tested around Puget Sound, the first confirmed detection of the parasite in a wild host on the contiguous U.S. West Coast.

A study has solved the mystery of why Indigenous hunters stopped using the Bergstrom site in central Montana around 1,100 years ago, despite abundant bison in the area.

由 AI 报道

A long-running Swedish program to protect wolverines by paying reindeer herders is under strain, according to new research. Wolverine numbers have fallen in key northern areas while funding has not kept pace with costs. The study warns that conservation gains can erode without ongoing support.

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝