Abstract

Translocations are a valuable tool within conservation, and when performed successfully can rescue species from extinction. However, to label a translocation a success, extensive post-translocation monitoring is required, ensuring the population is growing at the expected rate. In 2011, a habitat assessment identified Frégate Island as a suitable island to host a Seychelles Warbler (Acrocephalus sechellensis) population. Later that year, 59 birds were translocated from Cousin Island to Frégate Island. Here, we determine Seychelles Warbler habitat use and population growth on Frégate Island, assessing the status of the translocation and identifying any interventions that may be required. We found that territory quality, an important predictor of fledgling production on Cousin Island, was a poor predictor of bird presence on Frégate Island. Instead, tree diversity, middle-storey vegetation density, and broad-leafed vegetation density all predicted bird presence positively. A habitat suitability map based on these results suggests most of Frégate Island contains either a suitable or a moderately suitable habitat, with patches of unsuitable overgrown coconut plantation. To achieve the maximum potential Seychelles Warbler population size on Frégate Island, we recommend habitat regeneration, such that the highly diverse subset of broad-leafed trees and a dense middle storey should be protected and replace the unsuitable coconut. Frégate Island’s Seychelles Warbler population has grown to 141 birds since the release, the slowest growth rate of all Seychelles Warbler translocations; the cause of this is unclear. This study highlights the value of post-translocation monitoring, identifying habitat use and areas requiring restoration, and ultimately ensuring that the population is growing.

Highlights

  • Translocations can be a valuable tool within conservation, facilitating the return of a species into its extirpated range, or introducing a species into a suitable habitat outside this range (Fischer and Lindenmayer 2000)

  • The territory quality index based on insect prey availability (Brouwer et al 2009) was a poor predictor of Seychelles Warbler presence on Frégate Island

  • This was unexpected as the territory quality index influences fitness on Cousin Island (Hammers et al 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Translocations can be a valuable tool within conservation, facilitating the return of a species into its extirpated range, or introducing a species into a suitable habitat outside this range (Fischer and Lindenmayer 2000). Translocations are responsible for numerous conservation successes by alleviating extinction pressures on some of the most threatened species (Griffith et al 1989; Fischer and Lindenmayer 2000; Elliott et al 2001) These species were largely forced into extirpation as a result of severe habitat alteration and through the introduction of invasive predators (Griffith et al 1989). By restoration of altered habitats and removal of the invasive predators, areas can once again support threatened species (Armstrong and Seddon 2008) This allows a species’ range to be extended and the eventual development of new metapopulations (Marsh and Trenham 2001). Both of these effects decrease the extinction risk caused by stochastic events such as disease or natural disasters, as well as increasing the chances of the prolonged survival of the species (Gog et al 2002)

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