New Zealand Journal of Zoology abstracts
Z00019Received and accepted 17 July 2000
The response of a colony of sooty shearwater (Puffinus griseus) and
flesh-footed shearwater (P. carneipes) to the cessation of harvesting
and the eradication of Norway rats (Rattus norvegicus)
PETER GAZE
Department of Conservation
Private Bag 5, Nelson
Abstract The young of the sooty shearwater and flesh-footed
shearwater have traditionally been harvested from Titi Island in Cook Strait,
New Zealand. The apparent decline of this breeding colony prompted the
cessation of harvesting in 1960 and the eradication of Norway rats during the
1970s. An increase in the colony was expected, and there have been attempts to
measure this by counting the number of active burrows in fixed 10 m x
10 m plots from 1987 to 1998. No change was detected over this period.
Possible reasons for this are discussed. The decline is consistent with a more
widely observed decline in sooty shearwater numbers, and with the likelihood
that this colony has always been on the margin of these species' range.
Keywords sooty shearwater; flesh-footed shearwater; Norway
rat; harvesting; Titi Island; limiting factors
New Zealand Journal of Zoology, 2000, Vol. 27: 381-393
0301-4223/00/2704-0381 $7.00/0 (c) The Royal Society of New
Zealand 2000
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (735K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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