4.7 Article

Large scale predator control improves the productivity of a rare New Zealand riverine duck

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
Volume 141, Issue 11, Pages 2784-2794

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2008.08.013

Keywords

Predator control; Adaptive management; Blue duck; Whio; Hymenolaimus malacorhynchos; Stoats; Mustela erminea

Funding

  1. New Zealand Department of Conservation
  2. University of Canterbury Doctoral Scholarship

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Declines in avian populations are often attributed to the presence of introduced predators but conservation managers frequently lack good information about the effectiveness of potential predator control regimes for protecting threatened species. Whio, Hymenolaimus malacorhynchos, are a threatened New Zealand waterfowl that has been declining in both distribution and abundance. We conducted a six-year study using a paired-catchment experiment in New Zealand Nothofagus forest as part of an adaptive management programme to assess whether whio populations responded positively to stoat (Mustela erminea) control. Video monitoring identified stoats as the primary nest predator. Year-round low-intensity stoat control (10 traps per linear km) significantly reduced the stoat abundance index in trapped sites compared with untrapped sites. As a result, whio nesting success and productivity, the number of fledglings produced per pair, increased significantly in the trapped compared to the untrapped area. However, survival rates and the number of pairs did not change significantly between the treatments. These findings indicate stoats are the primary agent of decline for whio in this Nothofagus forest system, and show that low-intensity stoat control is sufficient to improve the productivity of whio populations. Overall, the study demonstrates the value of an adaptive management approach whereby management techniques can be evaluated to ensure that the primary agent of decline is clearly identified and that predator densities are kept sufficiently low. (c) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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