Identifying native and exotic predators of ground-nesting songbirds in subantartic forests in southern Chile

Birds constitute the most diverse and abundant group of vertebrates in the austral archipelago of southern South America; yet key aspects of their ecology such as nesting success and predators are little known. The American mink (Neovison vison) was introduced to Tierra del Fuego in the 1940s and ex...

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Autores principales: Maley,Brett M, Anderson,Christopher B, Stodola,Kirk, Rosemond,Amy D
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Universidad de Magallanes 2011
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Acceso en línea:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0718-686X2011000100004
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spelling oai:scielo:S0718-686X20110001000042018-09-05Identifying native and exotic predators of ground-nesting songbirds in subantartic forests in southern ChileMaley,Brett MAnderson,Christopher BStodola,KirkRosemond,Amy D American mink artificial nest ground nesting songbirds Tierra del Fuego Birds constitute the most diverse and abundant group of vertebrates in the austral archipelago of southern South America; yet key aspects of their ecology such as nesting success and predators are little known. The American mink (Neovison vison) was introduced to Tierra del Fuego in the 1940s and expanded its range south of the Beagle Channel into the Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve by 2001. As a new top predator, the invasive mink may have significant impacts on naïve avian species, including some forest Passeriformes that nest on the ground. To determine the identity and effect of ground nest predators, we conducted an artificial nest experiment and assessed the impact of predators on daily survival rates of artificial nests in three different habitat types (anthropogenic shrublands, beaver meadows, and forests). We found that 65% of nests were depredated (40% due to native Southern House Wrens [Troglodytes musculus] and 25% from mink). However, we discovered that mink were the cause of 53% of the nest failures in the anthropogenic shrubland. These findings demonstrated that both native and exotic predators affect nesting success of subantarctic forest avifauna, but the infuence of an invasive top predator, the mink, constitutes a new threat that will likely affect both nesting success and parental survival.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessUniversidad de MagallanesAnales del Instituto de la Patagonia v.39 n.1 20112011-01-01text/htmlhttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0718-686X2011000100004en10.4067/S0718-686X2011000100004
institution Scielo Chile
collection Scielo Chile
language English
topic American mink
artificial nest
ground nesting songbirds
Tierra del Fuego
spellingShingle American mink
artificial nest
ground nesting songbirds
Tierra del Fuego
Maley,Brett M
Anderson,Christopher B
Stodola,Kirk
Rosemond,Amy D
Identifying native and exotic predators of ground-nesting songbirds in subantartic forests in southern Chile
description Birds constitute the most diverse and abundant group of vertebrates in the austral archipelago of southern South America; yet key aspects of their ecology such as nesting success and predators are little known. The American mink (Neovison vison) was introduced to Tierra del Fuego in the 1940s and expanded its range south of the Beagle Channel into the Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve by 2001. As a new top predator, the invasive mink may have significant impacts on naïve avian species, including some forest Passeriformes that nest on the ground. To determine the identity and effect of ground nest predators, we conducted an artificial nest experiment and assessed the impact of predators on daily survival rates of artificial nests in three different habitat types (anthropogenic shrublands, beaver meadows, and forests). We found that 65% of nests were depredated (40% due to native Southern House Wrens [Troglodytes musculus] and 25% from mink). However, we discovered that mink were the cause of 53% of the nest failures in the anthropogenic shrubland. These findings demonstrated that both native and exotic predators affect nesting success of subantarctic forest avifauna, but the infuence of an invasive top predator, the mink, constitutes a new threat that will likely affect both nesting success and parental survival.
author Maley,Brett M
Anderson,Christopher B
Stodola,Kirk
Rosemond,Amy D
author_facet Maley,Brett M
Anderson,Christopher B
Stodola,Kirk
Rosemond,Amy D
author_sort Maley,Brett M
title Identifying native and exotic predators of ground-nesting songbirds in subantartic forests in southern Chile
title_short Identifying native and exotic predators of ground-nesting songbirds in subantartic forests in southern Chile
title_full Identifying native and exotic predators of ground-nesting songbirds in subantartic forests in southern Chile
title_fullStr Identifying native and exotic predators of ground-nesting songbirds in subantartic forests in southern Chile
title_full_unstemmed Identifying native and exotic predators of ground-nesting songbirds in subantartic forests in southern Chile
title_sort identifying native and exotic predators of ground-nesting songbirds in subantartic forests in southern chile
publisher Universidad de Magallanes
publishDate 2011
url http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0718-686X2011000100004
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AT stodolakirk identifyingnativeandexoticpredatorsofgroundnestingsongbirdsinsubantarticforestsinsouthernchile
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