4.4 Article

Limited top-down effects of feral cats on rodent dynamics in a seabird colony

期刊

BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS
卷 25, 期 12, 页码 3965-3981

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10530-023-03152-x

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Conservation management; Feral cat; Seabirds; Invasive species control; Island ecosystems; Trophic cascade

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Controlling invasive predators is crucial for protecting island biodiversity. This study investigates the effectiveness of a cat-trapping program on reducing feral cat density and its potential influence on native and invasive mammal species. The results show that trapping can effectively reduce cat density in a focused landscape context. However, the study found no direct effect of cat reduction on the abundance or behavior of native or invasive mammalian prey species. The study highlights the complexity of subsequent effects of invasive predator control on the broader ecosystem.
Control of invasive predators is a priority to protect island biodiversity. Understanding the responses of other species in multi-species invaded food webs is important to avoid unintended consequences. We use an intensive 2-year cat-trapping program in the vicinity of seabird colonies on Bruny Island, Tasmania, to investigate its effectiveness in reducing feral cat density and whether cat control influenced the behaviour and abundance of native and invasive mammal species. Cat density before control was extremely high around this seasonally rich food resource, much higher than on mainlands. Cat density was reduced 5.4-fold by control showing that trapping is effective in reducing cat density in this focussed landscape context. We found no direct effect of cat reduction on the abundance or behaviour of native or invasive mammalian prey species. Recruitment of invasive black rats and native swamp rats increased on the seabird colonies after the shearwater breeding season, and cats responded by increasing their presence on the colonies relative to surrounding areas. This suggests cascading bottom-up effects from a lagged productivity pulse provided by breeding seabirds which would require nutrient sampling to confirm. Our results highlight the complexity of subsequent effects of an invasive predator control on the broader ecosystem.

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