On Aotea/Great Barrier Island, New Zealand, two invasive rat species (Pacific rats and ship rats) pose risks to the ecosystems and challenge the management in two sanctuaries. At Glenfern Sanctuary (83 ha) an eradication has successfully removed ship rats and a predator-proof fence prevents reinvasion. However, Pacific rats persist in low abundance. At Windy Hill Sanctuary (770 ha) intensive rodent control maintains both species at low abundance despite ongoing reinvasion. A capture-mark-recapture study was conducted between February and April in 2016 and repeated between July and September 2017 to determine population densities, confirm species composition, and analyse the effects of time, population density, and interspecific competition ...
Due to its unique biodiversity and extreme endemism rates, New Caledonia archipelago is listed as on...
Interspecific competition is observed when one species experiences reduced survivorship or fecundity...
Possum numbers have been significantly reduced in many regions of New Zealand. However, research ha...
Rodent eradications in tropical environments are often more challenging and less successful than tho...
Invasive rats on oceanic islands impact a large number of native species. Control programs, and in ...
Invasive rodents are successful colonists of many ecosystems around the world, and can have very fle...
In New Zealand ship rats (Rattus rattus) are one of the major threats to endemic fauna and flora. Ru...
Invasive rats continue to colonize rat-free islands around the world. To prevent rats from establish...
Invasive species are a major threat to biodiversity throughout the world. In New Zealand, invasive r...
Invasive rodent species have established on 80% of the world\u27s islands causing significant damage...
Invasive rats are the biggest threat to island biodiversity world-wide. Though the ecological impact...
Four species of introduced rodent live in New Zealand. No more than three species are sympatric here...
Two species of European commensal murids, the Norway rat norvegicus and the ship rat Rattus rattus, ...
The three most invasive rat species, black or ship rat Rattus rattus, brown or Norway rats, R. norve...
Rodent eradications have contributed to the recovery of many threatened species, but challenges ofte...
Due to its unique biodiversity and extreme endemism rates, New Caledonia archipelago is listed as on...
Interspecific competition is observed when one species experiences reduced survivorship or fecundity...
Possum numbers have been significantly reduced in many regions of New Zealand. However, research ha...
Rodent eradications in tropical environments are often more challenging and less successful than tho...
Invasive rats on oceanic islands impact a large number of native species. Control programs, and in ...
Invasive rodents are successful colonists of many ecosystems around the world, and can have very fle...
In New Zealand ship rats (Rattus rattus) are one of the major threats to endemic fauna and flora. Ru...
Invasive rats continue to colonize rat-free islands around the world. To prevent rats from establish...
Invasive species are a major threat to biodiversity throughout the world. In New Zealand, invasive r...
Invasive rodent species have established on 80% of the world\u27s islands causing significant damage...
Invasive rats are the biggest threat to island biodiversity world-wide. Though the ecological impact...
Four species of introduced rodent live in New Zealand. No more than three species are sympatric here...
Two species of European commensal murids, the Norway rat norvegicus and the ship rat Rattus rattus, ...
The three most invasive rat species, black or ship rat Rattus rattus, brown or Norway rats, R. norve...
Rodent eradications have contributed to the recovery of many threatened species, but challenges ofte...
Due to its unique biodiversity and extreme endemism rates, New Caledonia archipelago is listed as on...
Interspecific competition is observed when one species experiences reduced survivorship or fecundity...
Possum numbers have been significantly reduced in many regions of New Zealand. However, research ha...