Abstract

Seabirds nesting on islands are threatened by invasive rodents, such as mice and rats, which may attack eggs, chicks and even adults. The low feasibility of rat eradications on many islands makes the development of alternate control plans necessary. We used a combination of field experiments on a Mediterranean island invaded by black rats ( Rattus rattus ) to evaluate (1) the predation risk posed to different-sized seabird eggs and (2), the potential of two deterrent methods (electronic and chemical) to reduce its impact. Rats were able to consume eggs of all sizes (12 to 68 g), but survival increased 13 times from the smallest to the largest eggs (which also had more resistant eggshells). Extrapolation to seabird eggs suggests that the smallest species ( Hydrobates pelagicus ) suffer the most severe predation risk, but even the largest ( Larus michahellis ) could suffer >60% mortality. Nest attack was not reduced by the deterrents. However, chemical deterrence (conditioned taste aversion by lithium chloride) slowed the increase in predation rate over time, which resulted in a three-fold increase in egg survival to predation as compared to both control and electronic deterrence. At the end of the experimental period, this effect was confirmed by a treatment swap, which showed that conferred protection remains at least 15 days after cessation of the treatment. Results indicate that small seabird species are likely to suffer severe rates of nest predation by rats and that conditioned taste aversion, but not electronic repellents, may represent a suitable method to protect colonies when eradication or control is not feasible or cost-effective.

Highlights

  • Biological invasions represent one of the global drivers of biodiversity loss [1,2]

  • Because insular biotas tend to be less diverse than continental ones, they offer weaker resistance to biological invasions and greater sensitivity to their effects [9,10], which often include cascades of native-species extinctions [11,12]

  • Around 60% of the seabird species cited in the IUCN red list are under some level of threat from invasive animals, most often through their effect on breeding colonies ( [8,17])

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Biological invasions represent one of the global drivers of biodiversity loss [1,2]. They often alter ecosystem structure and function, and their effects feed back to other elements of global change [3]. Around 60% of the seabird species cited in the IUCN red list are under some level of threat from invasive animals (mainly mammals [16]), most often through their effect on breeding colonies ( [8,17]). Amongst such predators, rats ( black rats; Rattus rattus) are considered to be a direct cause of the threatened status of at least 75 island-nesting species of seabirds [18]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call