In South Georgia,
Acaena magellanica may cover the ground in dense patches. It is deciduous, and when the leaves are shed, mosses like
Tortula robusta, which grows underneath, flourish. The
Kerguelen Islands are in the
Southern Indian Ocean Islands tundra ecoregion which is characterised by tussock grasses, lichens and liverworts.
A. magellanica is one of the few low
forbs that grew here, but the introduction of the
European rabbit (
Oryctolagus cuniculus), which selectively grazes the species it prefers, eliminated many of the native forbs. When the rabbit was eradicated,
A. magellanica and other forbs failed to recover because years of herbivory had depleted their seed banks, and introduced species such as
annual meadow grass (
Poa annua),
mouse-ear chickweed (
Cerastium fontanum) and
dandelion (
Taraxacum officinale) out-competed them. ==References==