4.7 Article

Sharing meals: Predation on Australian mammals by the introduced European red fox compounds and complements predation by feral cats

期刊

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
卷 261, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2021.109284

关键词

Bat; Diet; Extinction; Invasive species; Marsupial; Rodent; Threatened species

资金

  1. Australian Government's National Environmental Science Program through the Threatened Species Recovery Hub
  2. Conservation Ecology Centre, Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment and Victorian Environmental Assessment Council
  3. Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions (DBCA)
  4. Centre for Invasive Species Solutions

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The European red fox and domestic cat introduced into Australia have had significant impacts on wildlife, particularly mammals. Analysis shows that both predators have consumed a large number of Australian mammal species, with foxes known to consume more species than cats. Their compounding and complementary impacts on Australian mammals highlight the need for targeted and integrated management strategies.
Two introduced carnivores, the European red fox Vulpes vulpes and domestic cat Felis catus, have had, and continue to have, major impacts on wildlife, particularly mammals, across Australia. Based mainly on the contents of almost 50,000 fox dietary samples, we provide the first comprehensive inventory of Australian mammal species known to be consumed by foxes, and compare this with a similar assessment for cats. We recorded consumption by foxes of 114 species of Australian land mammal (40% of extant species), fewer than consumed by cats (173 species). Foxes are known to consume 42 threatened mammal species (50% of Australia's threatened land mammals and 66% of those within the fox's Australian range). Reflecting the importance of mammals in their diet, foxes are known to consume a far higher proportion of Australian mammal species (40%) than of Australian birds (24%) and reptiles (16%). Both foxes and cats were most likely to consume medium-sized mammals, with the likelihood of predation by foxes peaking for mammals of ca. 280 g and by cats at ca. 130 g. For non-flying mammals, threatened species had a higher relative likelihood of predation by foxes than non-threatened species. Using trait-based modelling, we estimate that many now-extinct Australian mammal species had very high likelihoods of predation by foxes and cats, although we note that for some of these species, extinction likely pre-dated the arrival of foxes. These two predators continue to have compounding and complementary impacts on Australian mammals. Targeted and integrated management of foxes and cats is required to help maintain and recover the Australian mammal fauna.

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