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New Zealand Journal of Zoology abstracts


Home ranges of introduced mammalian carnivores at Trounson Kauri Park, Northland, New Zealand

C. A. Gillies

Department of Conservation
Research, Development & Improvement Division
PO Box 112
Hamilton 3240, New Zealand

P. J. Graham

Department of Conservation
Whangarei Area Office
PO Box 147
Whangarei 0140, New Zealand

M. N. Clout

The University of Auckland
Private Bag 92019
Auckland 1142, New Zealand

Abstract    At Trounson Kauri Park, we monitored the movements of 21 feral cats (Felis catus), 11 stoats (Mustela erminea) and one male ferret (Mustela furo). In feral cats, the average minimum home range was 446 ha (±82 SE) for 14 males, significantly larger than the average minimum of 117 ha (±40 SE) for seven females. In stoats the average minimum home range was 107 ha (±20 SE), for nine males compared with 81 ha (±31 SE) for two females. The single male ferret had a minimum home range of 197 ha. Adult male feral cats lived on apparently separate, non-overlapping home ranges; females occupied exclusive home ranges which were overlapped by adult males; home ranges of sub-adult male feral cats overlapped those of other sub-adult male, adult male and female feral cats. The home ranges of two neighbouring male stoats overlapped, although their core ranges did not; both these and the ferret’s home ranges overlapped those of the neighbouring feral cats. The feral cats were often located in cover in pastureland or near the edge of larger tracts of forest within their home ranges; stoats near waterways in the larger tracts of forest; and the ferret near the forest/pasture margins of Trounson Kauri Park. Our results suggest that control devices targeting all these species should be set at a minimum spacing of 800 m in order to put the majority of the resident and immigrant predators at risk.

Keywords    cat; ferret; home range; predator control; radio telemetry; stoat; Trounson Kauri Park

Z07013; Online publication date 5 October 2007; Received 4 April 2007; accepted 19 September 2007

New Zealand Journal of Zoology, 2007, Vol. 34: 317–333
0301–4223/07/3404–317 © The Royal Society of New Zealand 2007
 

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