Foxes, voles, and waders: drivers of predator activity in wet grassland landscapes

Impacts of generalist predators on declining prey populations are a major conservation issue, but management of this situation is constrained by limited knowledge of the factors influencing predator distribution and activity. In many declining populations of ground-nesting waders, high levels of nes...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rebecca A. Laidlaw, Jennifer Smart, Mark A. Smart, Thomas W. Bodey, Tessa Coledale, Jennifer A. Gill
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/a002f98e39b94e2f9c4deb32084dba36
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author Rebecca A. Laidlaw
Jennifer Smart
Mark A. Smart
Thomas W. Bodey
Tessa Coledale
Jennifer A. Gill
author_facet Rebecca A. Laidlaw
Jennifer Smart
Mark A. Smart
Thomas W. Bodey
Tessa Coledale
Jennifer A. Gill
author_sort Rebecca A. Laidlaw
collection Unknown
description Impacts of generalist predators on declining prey populations are a major conservation issue, but management of this situation is constrained by limited knowledge of the factors influencing predator distribution and activity. In many declining populations of ground-nesting waders, high levels of nest and chick predation are preventing population recovery. Red foxes, Vulpes vulpes, are the main predator but their primary prey is small mammals. On wet grasslands managed for breeding waders, small mammals are concentrated in tall vegetation outside of fields, and nests closer to these patches are less likely to be predated. To assess whether these patterns result from fox attraction to small mammals, and thus the potential for management of tall vegetation to influence nest predation rates, we quantify seasonal and spatial variation in fox and small mammal activity in relation to tall vegetation patches. Across wet grassland sites, tall vegetation patches of any size (> 0.05 ha) supported small mammals and small mammal activity increased throughout the wader breeding season, while the use of fox track plots within fields declined seasonally. Although within field fox track plot use did not vary with distance to tall vegetation, over the 1064 nights of trail camera recording, foxes were seen in areas with tall vegetation on 13 nights compared with short vegetation on only two nights. These findings suggest that lower predation rates of Lapwing, Vanellus vanellus, nests close to tall vegetation could reflect fox attraction to areas with small mammal activity, but any such effects would primarily operate later in the breeding season, and may therefore primarily influence late nests and chicks.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Vanellus vanellus
genre_facet Vanellus vanellus
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op_source Avian Conservation and Ecology, Vol 14, Iss 2, p 4 (2019)
publishDate 2019
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:a002f98e39b94e2f9c4deb32084dba36 2025-01-17T01:15:41+00:00 Foxes, voles, and waders: drivers of predator activity in wet grassland landscapes Rebecca A. Laidlaw Jennifer Smart Mark A. Smart Thomas W. Bodey Tessa Coledale Jennifer A. Gill 2019-12-01 https://doaj.org/article/a002f98e39b94e2f9c4deb32084dba36 en eng Resilience Alliance 1712-6568 https://doaj.org/article/a002f98e39b94e2f9c4deb32084dba36 undefined Avian Conservation and Ecology, Vol 14, Iss 2, p 4 (2019) habitat management landscape management predation pressure shorebirds sward structure envir geo Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2019 fttriple 2023-01-22T19:30:35Z Impacts of generalist predators on declining prey populations are a major conservation issue, but management of this situation is constrained by limited knowledge of the factors influencing predator distribution and activity. In many declining populations of ground-nesting waders, high levels of nest and chick predation are preventing population recovery. Red foxes, Vulpes vulpes, are the main predator but their primary prey is small mammals. On wet grasslands managed for breeding waders, small mammals are concentrated in tall vegetation outside of fields, and nests closer to these patches are less likely to be predated. To assess whether these patterns result from fox attraction to small mammals, and thus the potential for management of tall vegetation to influence nest predation rates, we quantify seasonal and spatial variation in fox and small mammal activity in relation to tall vegetation patches. Across wet grassland sites, tall vegetation patches of any size (> 0.05 ha) supported small mammals and small mammal activity increased throughout the wader breeding season, while the use of fox track plots within fields declined seasonally. Although within field fox track plot use did not vary with distance to tall vegetation, over the 1064 nights of trail camera recording, foxes were seen in areas with tall vegetation on 13 nights compared with short vegetation on only two nights. These findings suggest that lower predation rates of Lapwing, Vanellus vanellus, nests close to tall vegetation could reflect fox attraction to areas with small mammal activity, but any such effects would primarily operate later in the breeding season, and may therefore primarily influence late nests and chicks. Article in Journal/Newspaper Vanellus vanellus Unknown
spellingShingle habitat management
landscape management
predation pressure
shorebirds
sward structure
envir
geo
Rebecca A. Laidlaw
Jennifer Smart
Mark A. Smart
Thomas W. Bodey
Tessa Coledale
Jennifer A. Gill
Foxes, voles, and waders: drivers of predator activity in wet grassland landscapes
title Foxes, voles, and waders: drivers of predator activity in wet grassland landscapes
title_full Foxes, voles, and waders: drivers of predator activity in wet grassland landscapes
title_fullStr Foxes, voles, and waders: drivers of predator activity in wet grassland landscapes
title_full_unstemmed Foxes, voles, and waders: drivers of predator activity in wet grassland landscapes
title_short Foxes, voles, and waders: drivers of predator activity in wet grassland landscapes
title_sort foxes, voles, and waders: drivers of predator activity in wet grassland landscapes
topic habitat management
landscape management
predation pressure
shorebirds
sward structure
envir
geo
topic_facet habitat management
landscape management
predation pressure
shorebirds
sward structure
envir
geo
url https://doaj.org/article/a002f98e39b94e2f9c4deb32084dba36