Ecological requirements and relative impact of threats affecting the Austral Rail Rallus antarcticus: Monitoring methodology considerations for an imperative conservation status re-evaluation

SummarySince its rediscovery in 1998, two major threats have been mentioned for the enigmatic Austral Rail Rallus antarcticus: cattle management by burning grass and rushes and predation by American mink Neovison vison. Added to the lack of a protocol to monitor this secretive bird, ever-growing thr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: De Miguel, A., Fasola, L.A.U.R.A., Roesler, I., Martin, L., Cossa, N., Giusti, E.
Format: Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09592709_v_n_p_DeMiguel
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spelling ftunibueairesbd:todo:paper_09592709_v_n_p_DeMiguel 2023-10-29T02:31:26+01:00 Ecological requirements and relative impact of threats affecting the Austral Rail Rallus antarcticus: Monitoring methodology considerations for an imperative conservation status re-evaluation De Miguel, A. Fasola, L.A.U.R.A. Roesler, I. Martin, L. Cossa, N. Giusti, E. https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09592709_v_n_p_DeMiguel unknown http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09592709_v_n_p_DeMiguel info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar JOUR ftunibueairesbd https://doi.org/20.500.12110/paper_09592709_v_n_p_DeMiguel 2023-10-05T01:57:16Z SummarySince its rediscovery in 1998, two major threats have been mentioned for the enigmatic Austral Rail Rallus antarcticus: cattle management by burning grass and rushes and predation by American mink Neovison vison. Added to the lack of a protocol to monitor this secretive bird, ever-growing threats make it necessary to study its global situation in depth to take accurate and urgent management decisions. We firstly studied how threats to the Austral Rail currently impact their occupancy and relative density (RD) at a wetland scale and habitat features associated with its presence at survey site scale inside wetlands in Santa Cruz province, Argentina. We additionally developed a monitoring protocol to detect the rail effectively and promptly by studying responses to playback with two different vocalisations at different times of the day and season. Both threats evaluated were negatively related to occupancy and RD of the Austral Rail, especially mink presence appearing to have an additive effect. We propose American mink control as crucial for Austral Rail conservation, while it would also be necessary to conserve a portion of wetlands exempt from burning and cattle presence. At survey sites, its presence was positively related with c.1-1.5 m tall rushes, whilst rails avoided low- density rush areas that resulted after management of rushes with fire to create pasture. To detect rails, both vocalisations can be confidently used at any time of the day and season. The poor knowledge about species ecology, mismanagement of vegetation in wetlands, expansion of American mink in Patagonia, construction on two dams in the Santa Cruz river basin, added to the already modified humidity conditions due to global climate change, force us to suggest that the Austral Rail should be considered as globally 'Endangered' (EN), to ensure the consideration of the species in management decisions. © BirdLife International 2019. Journal/Newspaper Antarc* antarcticus Biblioteca Digital FCEN-UBA (Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires)
institution Open Polar
collection Biblioteca Digital FCEN-UBA (Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires)
op_collection_id ftunibueairesbd
language unknown
description SummarySince its rediscovery in 1998, two major threats have been mentioned for the enigmatic Austral Rail Rallus antarcticus: cattle management by burning grass and rushes and predation by American mink Neovison vison. Added to the lack of a protocol to monitor this secretive bird, ever-growing threats make it necessary to study its global situation in depth to take accurate and urgent management decisions. We firstly studied how threats to the Austral Rail currently impact their occupancy and relative density (RD) at a wetland scale and habitat features associated with its presence at survey site scale inside wetlands in Santa Cruz province, Argentina. We additionally developed a monitoring protocol to detect the rail effectively and promptly by studying responses to playback with two different vocalisations at different times of the day and season. Both threats evaluated were negatively related to occupancy and RD of the Austral Rail, especially mink presence appearing to have an additive effect. We propose American mink control as crucial for Austral Rail conservation, while it would also be necessary to conserve a portion of wetlands exempt from burning and cattle presence. At survey sites, its presence was positively related with c.1-1.5 m tall rushes, whilst rails avoided low- density rush areas that resulted after management of rushes with fire to create pasture. To detect rails, both vocalisations can be confidently used at any time of the day and season. The poor knowledge about species ecology, mismanagement of vegetation in wetlands, expansion of American mink in Patagonia, construction on two dams in the Santa Cruz river basin, added to the already modified humidity conditions due to global climate change, force us to suggest that the Austral Rail should be considered as globally 'Endangered' (EN), to ensure the consideration of the species in management decisions. © BirdLife International 2019.
format Journal/Newspaper
author De Miguel, A.
Fasola, L.A.U.R.A.
Roesler, I.
Martin, L.
Cossa, N.
Giusti, E.
spellingShingle De Miguel, A.
Fasola, L.A.U.R.A.
Roesler, I.
Martin, L.
Cossa, N.
Giusti, E.
Ecological requirements and relative impact of threats affecting the Austral Rail Rallus antarcticus: Monitoring methodology considerations for an imperative conservation status re-evaluation
author_facet De Miguel, A.
Fasola, L.A.U.R.A.
Roesler, I.
Martin, L.
Cossa, N.
Giusti, E.
author_sort De Miguel, A.
title Ecological requirements and relative impact of threats affecting the Austral Rail Rallus antarcticus: Monitoring methodology considerations for an imperative conservation status re-evaluation
title_short Ecological requirements and relative impact of threats affecting the Austral Rail Rallus antarcticus: Monitoring methodology considerations for an imperative conservation status re-evaluation
title_full Ecological requirements and relative impact of threats affecting the Austral Rail Rallus antarcticus: Monitoring methodology considerations for an imperative conservation status re-evaluation
title_fullStr Ecological requirements and relative impact of threats affecting the Austral Rail Rallus antarcticus: Monitoring methodology considerations for an imperative conservation status re-evaluation
title_full_unstemmed Ecological requirements and relative impact of threats affecting the Austral Rail Rallus antarcticus: Monitoring methodology considerations for an imperative conservation status re-evaluation
title_sort ecological requirements and relative impact of threats affecting the austral rail rallus antarcticus: monitoring methodology considerations for an imperative conservation status re-evaluation
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09592709_v_n_p_DeMiguel
genre Antarc*
antarcticus
genre_facet Antarc*
antarcticus
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09592709_v_n_p_DeMiguel
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.12110/paper_09592709_v_n_p_DeMiguel
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