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Responses of New Zealand forest birds to management of introduced mammals
Authors:Nyree Fea  Wayne Linklater  Stephen Hartley
Institution:1. Centre for Biodiversity and Restoration Ecology, School of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, P.O. Box 600, Wellington, 6140 New Zealand;2. California State University, Sacramento 6000 J Street, Sacramento, CA, 95819 U.S.A
Abstract:Over the past 1000 years New Zealand has lost 40–50% of its bird species, and over half of these extinctions are attributable to predation by introduced mammals. Populations of many extant forest bird species continue to be depredated by mammals, especially rats, possums, and mustelids. The management history of New Zealand's forests over the past 50 years presents a unique opportunity because a varied program of mammalian predator control has created a replicated management experiment. We conducted a meta-analysis of population-level responses of forest birds to different levels of mammal control recorded across New Zealand. We collected data from 32 uniquely treated sites and 20 extant bird species representing a total of 247 population responses to 3 intensities of invasive mammal control (zero, low, and high). The treatments varied from eradication of invasive mammals via ground-based techniques to periodic suppression of mammals via aerially sown toxin. We modeled population-level responses of birds according to key life history attributes to determine the biological processes that influence species’ responses to management. Large endemic species, such as the Kaka (Nestor meridionalis) and New Zealand Pigeon (Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae), responded positively at the population level to mammal control in 61 of 77 cases for species ≥20 g compared with 31 positive responses from 78 cases for species <20 g. The Fantail (Rhipidura fuliginosa) and Grey Warbler (Gerygone igata), both shallow endemic species, and 4 nonendemic species (Blackbird Turdus merula], Chaffinch Fringilla coelebs], Dunnock Prunella modularis], and Silvereye Zosterops lateralis]) that arrived in New Zealand in the last 200 years tended to have slight negative or neutral responses to mammal control (59 of 77 cases). Our results suggest that large, deeply endemic forest birds, especially cavity nesters, are most at risk of further decline in the absence of mammal control and, conversely suggest that 6 species apparently tolerate the presence of invasive mammals and may be sensitive to competition from larger endemic birds.
Keywords:bird populations  body size  cavity nesting  ecosystem management  endemism  invasive  mammalian predator  native biodiversity  predator control  threatened species  anidación en cavidades  biodiversidad nativa  control de depredadores  endemismo  especies amenazadas  invasivo  mamíferos depredadores  manejo de ecosistemas  poblaciones de aves  tamaño corporal  最佳实践  实验设计  死亡率  可再生能源  采样偏差  太阳能  风能  野生动物监测
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