Abstract

This study aimed to quantify changes in rat abundance and population structure before, during, and after a rimu (Dacrydium cupressinum) mast seed event in lowland forest on Stewart Island, New Zealand. Rats, primarily ship rats (Rattus rattus), were trapped in low numbers throughout the study period (March 2000‐March 2003), except when they erupted to very high abundance in spring 2002, shortly after heavy rimu seed fall. In the immediate post‐peak phase, scavenging of trapped rats increased substantially; rats were seen and trapped in daylight; and weights of adult female rats were low in relation to their size, which suggests that food shortage was the cause of the subsequent steep decline in abundance. Rat eruptions have been observed on Stewart Island after heavy rimu seed fall several times over the past 40 years. Eruptions of rats caused by heavy rimu seed‐fall may have triggered the invasion of nearby islands by rats, and caused the extinction of several native species on Stewart Island.

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