Abstract

The introduction of American mink (Neovison vison; hereafter mink) into Europe has had severe impacts on many native wildlife species, including the water vole (Arvicola amphibius) in mainland Britain. Although trapping has been widely used to attempt to control mink, managers have little direct evidence of its effect on mink density or distribution, particularly where immigration of mink from nearby areas is inevitable. Such evidence is needed to justify the use of lethal methods in conservation policy. During 2006–2010 we removed mink from the River Monnow Catchment in western Britain, using track-recording rafts to monitor continuously for mink presence, guiding a strategic trapping effort. The area monitored and trapped was increased in stages, from a core sub-catchment with 109 km of water-course in 2006, to a 421-km2 catchment with 203 km of water-course in 2009. In each successive sub-catchment, mink detection and capture rates declined rapidly to near-zero levels after trapping began. Detections and captures showed seasonal peaks in every year corresponding to known dispersal periods, but also declined steadily from year to year, with increasing periods in which we did not detect mink. These results suggested that each sub-catchment was cleared of mink within a few months, with subsequent captures attributable to immigration. On average, we detected each mink 5.1 times before capture (daily probability of detection = 0.059 per mink and raft), and trapped them 3.4 days after deploying traps in response. On average, mink entering the area were likely to have been present for less than 13 days before capture. Water voles had been extinct in the Monnow Catchment since the 1980s. During 2006–2008 (starting 6 months after mink trapping commenced), we released 700 captive-bred water voles into the treatment area to re-establish a wild population. Persistence of this population through the 4 years of the project was considered indicative of effective mink control. This study demonstrates that, even in a mainland context, a systematic trapping strategy can have a substantial impact on the density and distribution of a damaging species, in this case allowing the restoration of a native prey species. © 2013 The Wildlife Society

Highlights

  • The introduction of American mink (Neovison vison; hereafter mink) into Europe has had severe impacts on many native wildlife species, including the water vole (Arvicola amphibius) in mainland Britain

  • We aimed to develop an evidence-based strategy for control of American mink, especially in a mainland or continental context where the probability of reinvasion is high

  • Killtrapping techniques for mink are long established in North America (e.g., Harding 1906), and live-capture methods accommodating concerns about non-targets were developed in Britain by the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Food during the 1970s (Bateman 1988)

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Summary

Introduction

The introduction of American mink (Neovison vison; hereafter mink) into Europe has had severe impacts on many native wildlife species, including the water vole (Arvicola amphibius) in mainland Britain. We found that track-recording mink rafts, which accumulated tracks on a clay-and-sand substrate over periods of 7–14 days, were a more sensitive detector of mink presence than were either field sign surveys or incidental sightings and, if rafts were used systematically, the probability of detecting each mink present was high, even at low population density (Reynolds et al 2004, 2009; Porteus et al 2012) This suggested a targeted control strategy in which traps were deployed only where mink were recently detected, economizing on daily trap-checking effort (Porteus et al 2012). Our study aimed to determine 1) whether our raft-guided mink trapping strategy could successfully control occupancy by mink, despite the lack of isolation from adjacent source populations and 2) whether this impact was sufficient to allow water voles to re-establish

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