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Vulnerability of ground-nesting waterbirds to predation by invasive American mink in the Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve, Chile
Authors:Elke Schü  ttler,Reinhard Klenke,Steven McGehee,Ricardo Rozzi,Kurt Jax
Affiliation:a Department of Conservation Biology, UFZ-Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, Permoserstr. 15, 04318 Leipzig, Germany
b Omora Ethnobotanical Park (IEB-Institute of Ecology and Biodiversity, University of Magallanes, and Omora Foundation), Puerto Williams, Antarctic Province, Chile
c Lehrstuhl für Landschaftsökologie, Technische Universität München-Weihenstephan, Am Hochanger 6, 85350 Freising, Germany
d Society for Nature Conservation and Landscape Ecology, Dorfstr. 31, 17237 Kratzeburg, Germany
e Department of Biology, University of Victoria, P.O. Box 3020,Victoria, B.C. V8W 3N5, Canada
f Department of Philosophy, University of North Texas, Denton, TX 76201, USA
Abstract:Biological invasions constitute one of the most important threats to biodiversity. This is especially true for “naïve” birds that have evolved in the absence of terrestrial predators in island ecosystems. The American mink (Mustela vison) has recently established a feral population on Navarino Island (55°S), southern Chile, where it represents a new guild of terrestrial mammal predators. We investigated the impact of mink on ground-nesting coastal waterbirds with the aim of deriving a vulnerability profile for birds as a function of different breeding strategies, habitat, and nest characteristics. We compared rates of nest survival and mink predation on 102 nests of solitary nesting species (Chloephaga picta, Tachyeres pteneres), on 361 nests of colonial birds (Larus dominicanus, Larus scoresbii, Sterna hirundinacea), and on 558 artificial nests. We calculated relative mink and bird densities at all nest sites. Nests of colonial species showed the highest nest survival probabilities (67-84%) and no predation by mink. Nest survival rates for solitary nesting species were lower (5-20%) and mink predation rates higher (10-44%). Discriminant analyses revealed that mink preyed upon artificial nests mainly at shores with rocky outcroppings where mink were abundant. High nest concealment increased the probability for predation by mink. Conservation planning should consider that invasive mink might severely affect the reproduction success of bird species with the following characteristics: solitary nesting, nesting habitat at rocky outcrop shores, and concealed nests. We recommend that work starts immediately to control the mink population with a priority in the nesting habitats of vulnerable endemic waterbirds.
Keywords:Artificial nests   Breeding birds   Management   Mustela vison   Nest characteristics   Nest survival
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