New Zealand Journal of Zoology abstracts
Effects of rat-poisoning operations on abundance and diet of mustelids in
New Zealand podocarp forests
ELAINE C. MURPHY
Department of Conservation
Private Bag 68-908
Newton
Auckland, New Zealand
B. KAY CLAPPERTON
49 Margaret Avenue
Havelock North, New Zealand
PHILIP M. F. BRADFIELD
Department of Conservation
Te Kuiti Field Centre
P.O. Box 38
Te Kuiti, New Zealand
HAZEL J. SPEED
Department of Conservation
Pureora Forest Park
RD7
Te Kuiti, New Zealand
Abstract This study aimed to quantify the changes in numbers
and diet of stoats, weasels and ferrets following rat and possum poison
operations in two podocarp-hardwood forests between 1989 and 1995. Poison
operations were classified according to their success in reducing rat numbers,
and if they used an acute toxin (1080) or an anticoagulant (brodifacoum or
pindone). Stoat catch rates followed the same seasonal patterns as rat
footprint tracking rates, and stoat catch rates were positively correlated with
rat catch rates. Rat numbers in spring had no significant relationship with the
number of juvenile stoats caught in summer. Stoat catch rates did not vary
significantly with poison-operation type over a six month period, but all three
successful anticoagulant operations resulted in lower stoat catch rates than
did unsuccessful operations. Brodifacoum in bait stations may have lowered
stoat numbers by secondary poisoning for the first 2-3 months, but thereafter
there was no apparent effect. The sex ratio of stoats caught varied
significantly amongst the poison operations. The fewest females were caught
following anticoagulant operations. Stoat stomachs and intestines contained
mostly rats, and some birds and mice. Weasels ate mostly mice, while ferrets
predominantly ate lagomorphs and invertebrates. Male and female stoats ate
similar proportions of rats, but females ate more mice. Both sexes, but
particularly females, ate fewer birds in autumn and winter than in spring and
summer. Stoats shifted between eating rats and birds, depending upon the
abundance of rats. Thus successful rat-poisoning operations resulted in higher
bird consumption than unsuccessful ones. Combining the numerical and functional
responses of stoats into a `bird predation index' showed that stoats are likely
to have the greatest effect on birds after successful 1080 poison operations.
Diet shifts could not be demonstrated in weasels or ferrets because sample
sizes were too small for quantitative assessments. The risk of increased
predation pressure on birds from diet-shifting by stoats must be balanced
against the predation pressure on birds and other ecological impacts of rats
and possums from different poison operations.
Keywords diet; functional response; mustelid; Mustela
erminea; Mustela furo; Mustela nivalis; numerical response;
poison; rat; stoat
Z98003
Received 9 January 1998; accepted 22 June 1998
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (1078K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
This year's abstracts |
Journal home page |
All abstracts |
Publishing home page