The balancing act of nest survival: survival of a small endemic bird in the face of ship rat predation and other risk factors
Predation of indigenous birds by ship rats (Rattus rattus, [Muridae]) is an international conservation crisis and has been implicated in the decline of many endemic species. Effective management of threatened ecosystems relies on accurate assessments of invasive species impacts on native wildlife. T...
Published in: | Avian Conservation and Ecology |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Resilience Alliance
2018
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.5751/ACE-01284-130211 https://doaj.org/article/213e8a5539094b05ad4c96aa9326a19f |
Summary: | Predation of indigenous birds by ship rats (Rattus rattus, [Muridae]) is an international conservation crisis and has been implicated in the decline of many endemic species. Effective management of threatened ecosystems relies on accurate assessments of invasive species impacts on native wildlife. To quantify the link between ship rat abundance and survival of small, endemic birds we investigated the prevalence of rat predation on nesting New Zealand Fantails (Rhipidura fuliginosa placabilis, [Rhipiduridae]), and its importance relative to other risk factors such as nest microsite. We surveyed 106 nests across forested reserves in Wellington City, New Zealand. Local abundance of ship rats was indexed using chew-cards placed around the nest and with tracking tunnels throughout reserves. We modeled the effects of ship rat abundance, weather, observer impact, and attributes of the nest for their influence on nest survival. Fantails were more likely to abandon nests located higher in trees and those built earlier in the breeding season. More nests failed when rat abundance was higher. Where ship rat abundance reached a 25% chew-card index (CCI), the probability of the nest surviving dropped below 50%, and for CCI above 45% only 20% of nests were predicted to survive. However, Fantails also exhibited a resilient strategy that improved survival because nests located on thinner branches were less likely to suffer predation. Our research suggests that nesting strategies of Fantails involve trade-offs and strategies that might protect them against one threat, might expose them to others. Fantails are a common endemic species and cope with moderate levels of nest predation, however conservation of small endemic birds with less resilient breeding strategies is likely to require management of ship rat populations to low levels. |
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