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Compounding and complementary carnivores: Australian bird species eaten by the introduced European red fox Vulpes vulpes and domestic cat Felis catus

Authors :
JOHN C.Z. WOINARSKI
ALYSON M. STOBO-WILSON
HEATHER M. CRAWFORD
STUART J. DAWSON
CHRIS R. DICKMAN
TIM S. DOHERTY
PATRICIA A. FLEMING
STEPHEN T. GARNETT
MATTHEW N. GENTLE
SARAH M. LEGGE
THOMAS M. NEWSOME
RUSSELL PALMER
MATTHEW W. REES
EUAN G. RITCHIE
JAMES SPEED
JOHN-MICHAEL STUART
EILYSH THOMPSON
JEFF TURPIN
BRETT P. MURPHY
Source :
Bird Conservation International. :1-17
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2021.

Abstract

Two introduced carnivores, the European red fox Vulpes vulpes and domestic cat Felis catus, have had extensive impacts on Australian biodiversity. In this study, we collate information on consumption of Australian birds by the fox, paralleling a recent study reporting on birds consumed by cats. We found records of consumption by foxes on 128 native bird species (18% of the non-vagrant bird fauna and 25% of those species within the fox’s range), a smaller tally than for cats (343 species, including 297 within the fox’s Australian range, a subset of that of the cat). Most (81%) bird species eaten by foxes are also eaten by cats, suggesting that predation impacts are compounded. As with consumption by cats, birds that nest or forage on the ground are most likely to be consumed by foxes. However, there is also some partitioning, with records of consumption by foxes but not cats for 25 bird species, indicating that impacts of the two predators may also be complementary. Bird species ≥3.4 kg were more likely to be eaten by foxes, and those

Details

ISSN :
14740001 and 09592709
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bird Conservation International
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c93fc064ada75273bf0a352961e263df
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/s0959270921000460