4.7 Article

Predation thresholds for reintroduction of native avifauna following suppression of invasive Brown Treesnakes on Guam

期刊

ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
卷 32, 期 8, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eap.2716

关键词

Aplonis opaca; Boiga irregularis; Corvus kubaryi; Hypotaenidia owstoni; Island endemic avifauna; Mariana Islands; nonnative predators; Pacific Islands conservation; Ptilinopus roseicapilla; reintroduction; Rhipidura rufifrons; Todiramphus cinnamominus

资金

  1. U.S. Marine Corps Defense Policy Review Initiative [M2002119MPDP154]

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The study examines the potential for native bird population persistence and reintroduction following the invasion of brown treesnakes on Guahan. Modeling the life history characteristics and sensitivity of different bird species to predation by brown treesnakes, the researchers find that bird persistence is possible in Guahan's forests with suppression of the snakes, but the contact rates with the snakes need to be reduced to certain thresholds. The findings of the study provide valuable management insights for brown treesnake control and bird reintroduction efforts.
The brown treesnake (BTS) (Boiga irregularis) invasion on Guahan (in English, Guam) led to the extirpation of nearly all native forest birds. In recent years, methods have been developed to reduce BTS abundance on a landscape scale. To help assess the prospects for the successful reintroduction of native birds to Guahan following BTS suppression, we modeled bird population persistence based on their life history characteristics and relative sensitivity to BTS predation. We constructed individual-based models and simulated BTS predation in hypothetical founding populations for each of seven candidate bird species. We represented BTS predation risk in two steps: risk of being encountered and risk of mortality if encountered. We link encounter risk from the bird's perspective to snake contact rates at camera traps with live animal lures, the most direct practical means of estimating BTS predation risk. Our simulations support the well-documented fact that Guahan's birds cannot persist with an uncontrolled population of BTS but do indicate that bird persistence in Guahan's forests is possible with suppression short of total eradication. We estimate threshold BTS contact rates would need to be below 0.0002-0.0006 snake contacts per bird per night for these birds to persist on the landscape, which translates to an annual encounter probability of 0.07-0.20. We simulated the effects of snake-proof nest boxes for Sihek (Todiramphus cinnamominus) and Sali (Aplonis opaca), but the benefits were small relative to the overall variation in contact rate thresholds among species. This variation among focal bird species in sustainable predation levels can be used to prioritize species for reintroduction in a BTS-suppressed landscape, but variation among these species is narrow relative to the required reduction from current BTS levels, which may be four orders of magnitude higher (>0.18). Our modeling indicates that the required predation thresholds may need to be lower than have yet been demonstrated with current BTS management. Our predation threshold metric provides an important management tool to help estimate target BTS suppression levels that can be used to determine when bird reintroduction campaigns might begin and serves as a model for other systems to match predator control with reintroduction efforts.

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