New Zealand Journal of Zoology abstracts
The role of ecological restoration in the conservation of Whitaker's skink
(Cyclodina whitakeri), a rare New Zealand lizard (Lacertilia:
Scincidae)
D. R. TOWNS
Science and Research Division
Department of Conservation
Private Bag 68 908
Newton, Auckland, New Zealand
Abstract A programme to improve the conservation status of
Whitaker's skink (
Cyclodina whitakeri), previously confined to
<20 ha of usable habitat, is described. The programme involved
eradication of introduced Pacific rats or kiore (
Rattus exulans) from
18 ha Korapuki Island (Mercury Islands, north-eastern New Zealand),
documentation of the response of five species of resident lizards to release
from the effects of rats, and transfer of 28 Whitaker's skinks from nearby
Middle Island between 1988 and 1990. Following removal of rats from Korapuki,
resident lizard numbers at some coastal sites increased within 12 months and
rose 30-fold over 5 years, but measurable increases of numbers of lizards in
forest areas took up to 6 years. Fifteen of the founding Whitaker's skinks on
Korapuki Island have been recaptured 36 times since their release, and five
Korapuki-born young have also been caught. The population is now estimated as
33. The increase in number of resident lizards and the success of the
introduction of Whitaker's skinks demonstrate that predation rather than
habitat deficiencies were responsible for the depleted resident lizard fauna on
Korapuki Island. Repatriation strategies for species with low intrinsic rates
of increase are proposed.
Keywords islands; Pacific rats; eradication; lizards; robust
skink; Cyclodina alani; tuatara; Sphenodon punctatus;
conservation; transfer
New Zealand Journal of Zoology, 1994, Vol. 21: 457-471
0301-4223/2104-0457 $2.50/0 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand
1994
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (890K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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