Unexpected involvement of a second rodent species makes impacts of introduced rats more difficult to detect

Abstract Rodent predators are implicated in declines of seabird populations, and removing introduced rats, often, but not always, results in the expected conservation gains. Here we investigated the relationship between small mammal (Norway rat, wood mouse and pygmy shrew) abundance and Manx shearwa...

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Main Authors: M. Lambert, S. Carlisle, I. Cain, A. Douse, L. Watt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-10-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-98956-z
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spelling doaj-1e694ad2a4734b7d98c515bd4390611f2021-10-10T11:30:33ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-10-0111111010.1038/s41598-021-98956-zUnexpected involvement of a second rodent species makes impacts of introduced rats more difficult to detectM. Lambert0S. Carlisle1I. Cain2A. Douse3L. Watt4National Wildlife Management Centre, Animal and Plant Health AgencyNational Wildlife Management Centre, Animal and Plant Health AgencyNBC Environment, Federation HouseNatureScot, Great Glen HouseNatureScot, Rum Reserve OfficeAbstract Rodent predators are implicated in declines of seabird populations, and removing introduced rats, often, but not always, results in the expected conservation gains. Here we investigated the relationship between small mammal (Norway rat, wood mouse and pygmy shrew) abundance and Manx shearwater breeding success on the island of Rum, Scotland, and tested whether localised rodenticide treatments (to control introduced Norway rats) increased Manx shearwater breeding success. We found that Manx shearwater breeding success was negatively correlated with late summer indices of abundance for rats and mice, but not shrews. On its own, rat activity was a poor predictor of Manx shearwater breeding success. Rat activity increased during the shearwater breeding season in untreated areas but was supressed in areas treated with rodenticides. Levels of mouse (and shrew) activity increased in areas treated with rodenticides (likely in response to lower levels of rat activity) and Manx shearwater breeding success was unchanged in treated areas (p < 0.1). The results suggest that, unexpectedly, negative effects from wood mice can substitute those of Norway rats and that both species contributed to negative impacts on Manx shearwaters. Impacts were intermittent however, and further research is needed to characterise rodent population trends and assess the long-term risks to this seabird colony. The results have implications for conservation practitioners planning rat control programmes on islands where multiple rodent species are present.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-98956-z
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Lambert
S. Carlisle
I. Cain
A. Douse
L. Watt
spellingShingle M. Lambert
S. Carlisle
I. Cain
A. Douse
L. Watt
Unexpected involvement of a second rodent species makes impacts of introduced rats more difficult to detect
Scientific Reports
author_facet M. Lambert
S. Carlisle
I. Cain
A. Douse
L. Watt
author_sort M. Lambert
title Unexpected involvement of a second rodent species makes impacts of introduced rats more difficult to detect
title_short Unexpected involvement of a second rodent species makes impacts of introduced rats more difficult to detect
title_full Unexpected involvement of a second rodent species makes impacts of introduced rats more difficult to detect
title_fullStr Unexpected involvement of a second rodent species makes impacts of introduced rats more difficult to detect
title_full_unstemmed Unexpected involvement of a second rodent species makes impacts of introduced rats more difficult to detect
title_sort unexpected involvement of a second rodent species makes impacts of introduced rats more difficult to detect
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-10-01
description Abstract Rodent predators are implicated in declines of seabird populations, and removing introduced rats, often, but not always, results in the expected conservation gains. Here we investigated the relationship between small mammal (Norway rat, wood mouse and pygmy shrew) abundance and Manx shearwater breeding success on the island of Rum, Scotland, and tested whether localised rodenticide treatments (to control introduced Norway rats) increased Manx shearwater breeding success. We found that Manx shearwater breeding success was negatively correlated with late summer indices of abundance for rats and mice, but not shrews. On its own, rat activity was a poor predictor of Manx shearwater breeding success. Rat activity increased during the shearwater breeding season in untreated areas but was supressed in areas treated with rodenticides. Levels of mouse (and shrew) activity increased in areas treated with rodenticides (likely in response to lower levels of rat activity) and Manx shearwater breeding success was unchanged in treated areas (p < 0.1). The results suggest that, unexpectedly, negative effects from wood mice can substitute those of Norway rats and that both species contributed to negative impacts on Manx shearwaters. Impacts were intermittent however, and further research is needed to characterise rodent population trends and assess the long-term risks to this seabird colony. The results have implications for conservation practitioners planning rat control programmes on islands where multiple rodent species are present.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-98956-z
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