4.7 Article

Predation impact on threatened spur-thighed tortoises by golden eagles when main prey is scarce

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-22288-9

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science [CGL2012-33536, CGL2015-64144, FPU1700633]
  2. European Regional Development Fund [CGL2012-33536, CGL2015-64144]
  3. MCIN/AEI [PID2019-105682RA-I00]
  4. Regional Valencian Government [AICO/2021/145, APOSTD/2020/090]
  5. Ramon y Cajal research contract from MINECO [RYC-2015-19231]
  6. European Union-Next Generation EU in the Maria Zambrano Program [ZAMBRANO 21-26]

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This study investigated the predation of spur-thighed tortoises by golden eagles and found that eagles showed a marked preference for adult female tortoises. This could potentially threaten the local population viability of the tortoises.
A reduction in adult survival in long-living species may compromise population growth rates. The spur-thighed tortoise (Testudo graeca) is a long-lived reptile that is threatened by habitat loss and fragmentation. Golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos), whose breeding habitats overlap that of tortoises, may predate them by dropping them onto rocks and breaking their carapaces. In SE Spain, the number of golden eagles has increased in the last decades and the abundance of their main prey (i.e., rabbits Oryctolagus cuniculus) has decreased. Our aims were to 1) describe the role of tortoises in golden eagles' diet, and 2) estimate the predation impact of golden eagles on tortoises in eagles' territories and in the regional tortoise population. We collected regurgitated pellets and prey remains under eagle nests and roosts, and obtained information on tortoise abundance and population structure and rabbit abundance. We found that tortoises were an alternative prey to rabbits, so that eagles shifted to the former where the latter were scarce. The average predation rate on tortoises was very low at the two studied scales. However, eagles showed a marked selection for adult female tortoises, which led the tortoise sex ratio to be biased towards males in those eagle territories with higher tortoise predation. Whether this may compromise the spur-thighed tortoise long-term population viability locally deserves further attention.

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