Survey for Morro Bay Kangaroo Rat: A Rare Mammal of Uncertain Status

Author:

Villablanca Francis X.1,Kofron Christopher P.2,Oliver Lauralea3,Walgren Michael J.4,Andreano Lisa E.4,Thiel Alexandra3

Affiliation:

1. F.X. Villablanca Department of Biological Sciences, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, California 93407

2. C.P. Kofron U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 2493 Portola Road, Suite B, Ventura, California 93003

3. L. Oliver, A. Thiel H. T. Harvey & Associates, 8080 N. Palm Avenue, Suite 205, Fresno, California 93730Present address of L. Oliver: K9inSCENTive, LLC, Santa Clarita, California 91387Present address of A. Thiel: California Department of Transportation, Eureka, California 95501

4. M.J. Walgren, L.E. Andreano California Department of Parks and Recreation, 750 Hearst Castle Road, San Simeon, California 93452

Abstract

Abstract The Morro Bay kangaroo rat Dipodomys heermanni morroensis is a small, nocturnal, burrowing rodent endemic to the vicinity of Morro Bay in San Luis Obispo County, California. It was listed as endangered pursuant to the U.S. Endangered Species Act in 1973. Despite many searches over three decades, the Morro Bay kangaroo rat has not been captured or sighted in the wild since 1986. While recognizing that the Morro Bay kangaroo rat may be extinct, two of us in a previous paper also speculated it may be persisting at extremely low density in isolated colonies and recommended surveying with wildlife scent-detection dogs and baited camera traps. We searched with a wildlife scent-detection dog and baited camera traps in four historically occupied areas and detected no Morro Bay kangaroo rats. Unfortunately, our data combined with all other existing data do not allow us to conclude whether the Morro Bay kangaroo rat is extinct or extant. Essentially, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature international standard has not been met to make a definitive determination of extinction. That is, a species should be considered extinct only when there is no reasonable doubt that the last individual has died. We acknowledge that because of resource limitation we surveyed only a small sample of the numerous patches of habitat in the expansive landscape. Further, we now consider the Morro Bay sand spit (total area 4.35 km2, foredunes 3.75 km2), a peripheral area, as potentially part of the geographic range with suitable habitat, and it has never been searched. Therefore, considering all available information, we conclude that the Morro Bay kangaroo rat must be considered as possibly extant. We recommend that search efforts continue in several specific areas, including the Morro Bay sand spit. If the Morro Bay kangaroo rat still exists, it will be challenging and difficult to rediscover because of its likely low density and patchy distribution in the expansive landscape, combined with its small size, nocturnal nature, and secretive lifestyle.

Publisher

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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