Abstract

Wildlife reintroduction strategies aim to establish viable long–term populations, promote conservation awareness and provide economic benefits for local communities. In Portugal, the Eurasian red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) became extinct in the 16th century and was reintroduced in urban parks in the 1990s, mainly for aesthetic and leisure purposes. We evaluated the success of this reintroduction in two urban parks and here described the critical steps. We assessed habitat use, population density and abundance, and management steps carried out during reintroduction projects. Reintroductions have been successful to some extent given squirrels are present 20 years after release. However, populations in both parks are declining due to the lack of active management and poor quality habitat. Successful reintroduction of Eurasian red squirrel in areas without competition of alien tree squirrels involves three critical main stages. The pre–project stage includes studies on habitat quality, genetic proximity between donors and closest wild population, and health of donor stocks. In the release stage, the number of individuals released will depend on resource variability, and the hard release technique is an effective and economically viable method. Post–release activities should evaluate adaptation, mitigate mortality, monitor the need for supplementary feeding, provide veterinary support, and promote public awareness and education.

Highlights

  • The best relative fit model and adjustment term for the population in the Parque Biológico de Gaia (PBG) was a hazard–rate cosine based on the lowest Akaike information criterion (AIC) score

  • The best fit for the Jardín Botánico de la Universidad de Coimbra (JBUC) population was a negative exponential cosine model based on the lowest AIC score

  • Reintroductions of Eurasian red squirrels in Portugal have been successful to some extent given that squirrels are still present in the urban parks almost 20 years later

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Summary

Introduction

Animal translocation is an ancient process used by humans to relocate species from one place to another (Griffith et al, 1989; Hodder & Bullock, 1997; Armstrong & Seddon, 2007; Seddon et al, 2007; Ewen et al, 2012). Griffith et al (1989) defined animal translocation as the intentional release to establish, re–establish or increase the population of a given species. Reintroductions should be carefully planned by a multidisciplinary team, and follow a three–step protocol, focusing on the pre–project activities, release stages and post–released activities (IUCN, 1998) Such projects require complex planning, implementing and monitoring species and habitats according to their biology, socio–economic impact on local communities, and legal requirements (Caughley & Gunn, 1996; IUCN, 1998; Armstrong & Seddon, 2007; Seddon et al, 2007; Ewen et al, 2012; Harrington et al, 2013). Publication and dissemination of successful and unsuccessful cases contribute to improve current reintroduction protocols (Armstrong & Seddon, 2007; Seddon et al, 2007; Ewen et al, 2012; IUCN, 2012)

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