Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand abstracts
The politics and unpredictable consequences of island transfers for the
protection of endangered species: an example from Russia (the European
mink, Mustela lutreola, on Kunashir Island)
E. A. Shvarts and M. A. Vaisfeld*
The policy of conserving endangered species by translocation to protected
islands creates many problems, which are here analysed using the example of the
European mink (
Mustela lutreola). Ten years after the first release of
European mink onto Kunashir Island (southern-most of the Kuril Islands, located
off the north-east coast of Hokkaido), there is still no information on the
effects of the new arrivals on the biodiversity of the island. No effort had
been made to determine which of the available islands would be least affected
by the introduction. The use of islands for the conservation of rare animal
species has many important restrictions. Long before any introduction of alien
biota to a natural ecosystem, the proposed release site must be thoroughly
examined and all possible alternative sites considered.
Keywords: endangered animal species, Mustela lutreola, conservation,
introductions, acclimatization, Kunashir Island.
(c) Journal of The Royal Society of New Zealand,
Volume 25, Number 3, September 1995, pp 313-325
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (1264K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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