رکورد قبلیرکورد بعدی

" The Removal of Feral Cats from San Nicolas Island: Methodology "


Document Type : AL
Record Number : 943639
Doc. No : LA6z1433vq
Language of Document : English
Main Entry : Hanson, Chad C.; Bonham, Jake E.; Campbell, Karl J.; Keitt, Brad S.; Little, Annie E.; Smith, Grace
Title & Author : The Removal of Feral Cats from San Nicolas Island: Methodology [Article]\ Hanson, Chad C.; Bonham, Jake E.; Campbell, Karl J.; Keitt, Brad S.; Little, Annie E.; Smith, Grace
Title of Periodical : Proceedings of the Vertebrate Pest Conference
Volume/ Issue Number : 24
Date : 2010
Abstract : Feral cats are considered one of the most detrimental invasive species within island ecosystems. Non-native feral cats have been on San Nicolas Island (5,896 ha, or 14,562 acres) since at least 1952. In an effort to counter the negative impacts of feral cats on marine and terrestrial birds, the San Nicolas seabird restoration project, with the goal of eradicating cats, was initiated in June 2009. Although aimed at seabird restoration, feral cat eradication is expected to aid in the protection of endemic terrestrial species, including the federally threatened island night lizard, federally threatened western snowy plover, a subspecies of deer mouse, and the state threatened island fox. Methods including the use of altered padded leg-hold live traps, detection dogs, and hunting are being utilized to deliver a successful eradication within a short window of opportunity. In addition, a trap monitoring system, operated in tandem with field PCs and GIS, has proven effective in managing large numbers of traps. Since initiation, a rotation of staff has provided an average of 6 field personnel on-island at any one time to staff the project continuously over 10 months. Eradication was complicated by the similarly sized island fox, rugged topography, restricted access to parts of the island by Navy activities, marine mammal presence on the beaches, and sea and shore birds nesting and roosting. Island eradications require multiple methods to effectively remove all cats, and operations on larger islands benefit from the intensive use of management tools such as GIS. The systems developed on the San Nicolas Seabird Restoration Project will advance the global effort to reduce the threats of invasive species, particularly feral cats.
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6z1433vq_50462.pdf
6z1433vq.pdf
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