Successful recovery of North Island kokako Callaeas cinerea wilsoni populations, by adaptive management

Autor: Flux, I., Innes, J., Jansen, P., Hay, R., Bradfield, P., Speed, H.
Předmět:
Zdroj: Biological Conservation. Feb1999, Vol. 87 Issue 2, p201. 0p.
Abstrakt: Kokako Callaeas cinerea wilsoni (Callaeidae) populations are declining in unmanaged primary forests of the North Island, New Zealand. An 8-year experiment to determine the cause of decline was undertaken bycontrolling introduced browsing and predatory mammal pests in two forest areas, then monitoring pest abundance, kokako chick output and adult density in e managed forests and an unmanaged non-treatment block. Treatments were switched between the unmanaged and one of the managed areas after 3--4 years. Reduction of pests, especially brushtail possums Trichosurus vulpecula and ship rats Rattus rattus to very lowlevels resulted in significant increases in kokako chick output and adult density in all three study populations. This was due primarily to increased success of nesting attempts, which then increased the number of pairs attempting to breed, initially as newly recruited youngfemales formed pairs with residual single males. The 'adaptive management' approach of using routine large-scale pest control in a co-ordinated experiment to directly test the pest-limitation hypothesis enabled researchers and managers to investigate the cause of decline andto increase populations simultaneously. Predation is a more immediate cause of current kokako declines than competition. Management to recover vulnerable kokako populations should aim to reduce possums and ship rats to very low levels ( < 1% trap catch for possums; < 1% tracking rate for ship rats, using particular indexing techniques) at theonset of the kokako nesting season, for several consecutive years. (c) 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: GreenFILE