4.5 Article

Laying low: Rugged lowland rainforest preferred by feral cats in the Australian Wet Tropics

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.9105

Keywords

camera-trap; elevation; Felis catus; national park; occupancy; topography

Funding

  1. Ecological Society of Australia
  2. Skyrail Rainforest Foundation
  3. Wet Tropics Management Authority

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Invasive mesopredators, particularly feral cats, have been causing decline in native mammals globally. This study conducted camera-trapping surveys in the Australian Wet Tropics and found that feral cats have a higher occupancy rate in lowland rainforest areas. Understanding environmental factors influencing feral cat distribution is crucial for management strategies.
Invasive mesopredators are responsible for the decline of many species of native mammals worldwide. Feral cats have been causally linked to multiple extinctions of Australian mammals since European colonization. While feral cats are found throughout Australia, most research has been undertaken in arid habitats, thus there is a limited understanding of feral cat distribution, abundance, and ecology in Australian tropical rainforests. We carried out camera-trapping surveys at 108 locations across seven study sites, spanning 200 km in the Australian Wet Tropics. Single-species occupancy analysis was implemented to investigate how environmental factors influence feral cat distribution. Feral cats were detected at a rate of 5.09 photographs/100 days, 11 times higher than previously recorded in the Australian Wet Tropics. The main environmental factors influencing feral cat occupancy were a positive association with terrain ruggedness, a negative association with elevation, and a higher affinity for rainforest than eucalypt forest. These findings were consistent with other studies on feral cat ecology but differed from similar surveys in Australia. Increasingly harsh and consistently wet weather conditions at higher elevations, and improved shelter in topographically complex habitats may drive cat preference for lowland rainforest. Feral cats were positively associated with roads, supporting the theory that roads facilitate access and colonization of feral cats within more remote parts of the rainforest. Higher elevation rainforests with no roads could act as refugia for native prey species within the critical weight range. Regular monitoring of existing roads should be implemented to monitor feral cats, and new linear infrastructure should be limited to prevent encroachment into these areas. This is pertinent as climate change modeling suggests that habitats at higher elevations will become similar to lower elevations, potentially making the environment more suitable for feral cat populations.

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