The identification of factors limiting the recovery of threatened bird species is an area of significant research in New Zealand, where high levels of endemism make protection of threatened species extremely important. Predation by introduced mammals is often assumed to be the most important limiting factor for populations of threatened bird species, and a number of methods have been developed and implemented to deal with predators. Pest-management operations have a long history of success in NZ, but can also have unexpected consequences for non-target species. The three most common mainland pest-management measures are trapping, poisoning, and predator-exclusion fencing. My study used the South Island robin (Petroica australis) as a model ...
The purpose of this research was to determine how predator control influences nest survival and chan...
Prior to human arrival, New Zealand was dominated by birds that had evolved in the absence of mammal...
The introduction of rats (Rattus spp.) and conversion of native forest and scrub have had a devastat...
The identification of factors limiting the recovery of threatened bird species is an area of signifi...
The majority of New Zealand’s native forest bird species are currently limited by introduced mammali...
Introduced mammalian predators are responsible for over half of contemporary extinctions and decline...
Anti-predator behaviours in birds often exhibit adaptive plasticity with the presence and abundance ...
Conservation in New Zealand has begun to focus heavily on the restoration of degraded mainland ecos...
International audienceTranslocation of endangered species to habitats where exotic predators have be...
Predation at nests contributes importantly to current declines of New Zealand forest birds. We monit...
Deforestation is a massive cause of global biodiversity loss. However, although natural and semi-nat...
Predation of indigenous birds by ship rats (Rattus rattus, [Muridae]) is an international conservati...
The kereru (New Zealand Pigeon, Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae) is a threatened endemic species. Predatio...
The introduction of predatory mammals to oceanic islands has led to the extinction of many endemic b...
Declines of avian populations in fragmented landscapes are well documented. However, the underlying ...
The purpose of this research was to determine how predator control influences nest survival and chan...
Prior to human arrival, New Zealand was dominated by birds that had evolved in the absence of mammal...
The introduction of rats (Rattus spp.) and conversion of native forest and scrub have had a devastat...
The identification of factors limiting the recovery of threatened bird species is an area of signifi...
The majority of New Zealand’s native forest bird species are currently limited by introduced mammali...
Introduced mammalian predators are responsible for over half of contemporary extinctions and decline...
Anti-predator behaviours in birds often exhibit adaptive plasticity with the presence and abundance ...
Conservation in New Zealand has begun to focus heavily on the restoration of degraded mainland ecos...
International audienceTranslocation of endangered species to habitats where exotic predators have be...
Predation at nests contributes importantly to current declines of New Zealand forest birds. We monit...
Deforestation is a massive cause of global biodiversity loss. However, although natural and semi-nat...
Predation of indigenous birds by ship rats (Rattus rattus, [Muridae]) is an international conservati...
The kereru (New Zealand Pigeon, Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae) is a threatened endemic species. Predatio...
The introduction of predatory mammals to oceanic islands has led to the extinction of many endemic b...
Declines of avian populations in fragmented landscapes are well documented. However, the underlying ...
The purpose of this research was to determine how predator control influences nest survival and chan...
Prior to human arrival, New Zealand was dominated by birds that had evolved in the absence of mammal...
The introduction of rats (Rattus spp.) and conversion of native forest and scrub have had a devastat...