Impact and control of feral cats preying on wandering albatrosses: Insights from a field experiment

Author:

Blanchard Pierrick12,Delord Karine2ORCID,Bodin Aymeric3,Guille Kevin2,Getti Tobie3,Barbraud Christophe2

Affiliation:

1. Centre de Recherche sur la Biodiversité et l'Environnement (CRBE) Université de Toulouse, CNRS, IRD, Toulouse INP, Université Toulouse 3 – Paul Sabatier (UT3) Toulouse France

2. Centre d'Études Biologiques de Chizé, CNRS‐La Rochelle Université, UMR 7372 Villiers‐en‐Bois France

3. Réserve Naturelle Nationale des Terres Australes Françaises, TAAF Saint‐Pierre France

Abstract

AbstractInvasive alien species are a major threat to seabird species, and the number of impacted species is still increasing. A recent study revealed for the first time that feral cats predated a large albatross species and that without cat control, some albatross populations would markedly decline. We examined this new predator–prey system by individually monitoring known‐age wandering albatross chicks with camera traps in a colony experimentally divided into zones with and without cat control. Our design allowed us to investigate how cat control influenced cat abundance and how this in turn influenced the probability for a chick to be predated by a cat. After cat controls, cat abundance was lower in controlled zones than in uncontrolled zones, while a survival analysis showed that the probability for a chick to die from cat predation depended on the zone but not on cat abundance. Our monitoring also provided a fine‐scale investigation of the various sources of chick mortality. In addition to cat predation (24% of mortality overall), our data documented predation by giant petrels, for the first time in Kerguelen, and revealed a strong and unexpected effect of nest flooding on chick mortality. Overall, our results underline the need for future studies investigating interindividual variability in cat diet and spatial ecology.

Publisher

Wiley

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