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201827Jan11:01

Preda­tor con­trol can have unin­tended consequences

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 27 Jan­u­ary 2018 | mod­i­fied 27 Jan­u­ary 2018
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Intro­duced preda­tors pose threats to bio­di­ver­sity and are impli­cated in the extinc­tion of many native species. A new analy­sis of pub­lished stud­ies high­lights unin­tended out­comes of preda­tor con­trol pro­grams that are imple­mented to mit­i­gate those threats to bio­di­ver­sity. The results of the analy­sis are pub­lished on 24 Jan­u­ary in the jour­nal Mam­mal Review.

Dingo Daniel HunterDingo.
Image credit: Daniel Hunter.

In Aus­tralia, con­sid­er­able effort is spent con­trol­ling pop­u­la­tions of intro­duced preda­tors, includ­ing the dingo (Canis dingo) and the red fox (Vulpes vulpes), in order to reduce their impact on native species and live­stock. The analy­sis found evi­dence that lethal con­trol of din­goes and foxes has dif­fer­ent out­comes for dif­fer­ent mam­malian species.

Dingo removal decreased the abun­dance of native mam­mals weigh­ing less than the crit­i­cal weight range of 305500 g, and increased the abun­dance of mam­mals above this weight range. Fox removal increased the abun­dances of ground-​dwelling and arbo­real mammals.

Lethal con­trol of din­goes did not have a sig­nif­i­cant effect on cats, but where din­goes were removed there was a ten­dency for foxes to increase, and where foxes were removed there was a ten­dency for cats to increase.

The find­ings show that these kind preda­tor removal mea­sures can lead to unde­sir­able changes in the mam­mal species con­sti­tu­tion of the ecosys­tem and, there­fore, pro­vide com­pre­hen­sive and objec­tive infor­ma­tion for effec­tive con­ser­va­tion management.

(Source: Wiley press release, 24.01.2018)


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