Author:
McElderry Robert M.,Paxton Eben H.,Nguyen Andre V.,Siers Shane R.
Abstract
The avifauna of Guam was devastated by the introduction of the Brown Treesnake, and the restoration of native birds would need to address the problem with eradication or suppression of BTS. With eradication of the snake unlikely in the near term, and suppression capabilities limited to specific finite areas, key information for reintroductions is how low BTS abundance will likely need to be for each bird species to be re-established based on their vulnerability to BTS predation. Here, we estimate vulnerability, which can no longer be measured directly, so biologists who are familiar with one or more of seven Guam birds were surveyed to obtain their knowledge and produce quantitative vulnerability estimates. As is typical of birds adapted to islands devoid of predators, respondents judged that our focal species exhibit few predator avoidance and tolerance traits, leaving body size as the prime determinant of vulnerability. Respondent opinion also holds that any behavior that reduces the likelihood of an encounter by BTS, e.g., roosting/nesting in palm crowns, cavity nesting, and in particular urban dwelling, substantially reduces vulnerability. Our results can help inform species-specific decisions about when it may be safe to consider the release of birds on Guam depending on the relative vulnerability of each species to predation by BTS.
Reference48 articles.
1. Breeding biology of the endangered Rota Bridled White-eye;Amidon;Wilson J. Ornithol.,2004
2. Alien predation and the effects of multiple levels of prey naiveté;Banks;Trends Ecol. Evol.,2007
3. Nest predation by arboreal snakes on cavity nesting-birds in dry Chaco woodlands459464
BerkunskyI.
KacolirisF. P.
FaegreS. I.
RuggeraR. A.
CarreraJ. D.
Arambur,úR. M.
Ornitol. Neotrop.222011
4. The rail road to recovery;Brock;Endangered Species,2000
5. Modeling tradeoffs in avian life history traits and consequences for population growth;Clark;Ecol. Modell.,2007
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献