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Dietary shift of an invasive predator: rats, seabirds and sea turtles
Article first published online: 6 DEC 2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2664.2007.01438.x
© 2007 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2007 British Ecological Society
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How to Cite
Caut, S., Angulo, E. and Courchamp, F. (2008), Dietary shift of an invasive predator: rats, seabirds and sea turtles. Journal of Applied Ecology, 45: 428–437. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2664.2007.01438.x
Publication History
- Issue published online: 6 DEC 2007
- Article first published online: 6 DEC 2007
- Received 20 March 2007; accepted 9 October 2007 Handling Editor: Simon Thirgood
Keywords:
- alien invasive species;
- Chelonia mydas;
- conventional diet;
- Rattus rattus;
- stable isotopes;
- trophic shift
Summary
- 1Rats have reached about 80% of the world's islands and are among the most successful invasive mammals. Rats are opportunistic predators that are notorious for their impact on a variety of animal and plant species. However, little documented evidence on the complexities of these interactions is available.
- 2In our study, we assessed the impact of black rats Rattus rattus introduced on a small uninhabited island with a relatively simple ecosystem, Surprise Island, New Caledonia. We also compared the diet of R. rattus in the presence and absence of breeding seabirds, assessing the dietary compensation for this potentially important food source. From 2002 to 2005, we used live trapping studies combined with stable isotope analysis and conventional diet analyses (direct observations, gut and faecal contents) to characterize the diet of rats.
- 3Our results suggest a heavy predatory impact on seabirds, which could constitute as much as 24% of the rat diet. Moreover, in the absence of birds, rats compensated marginally by preying more heavily on other components of their diet but mostly acquired a new resource. They shifted their diet by preying heavily upon another endangered species, the hatchlings of sea turtles Chelonia mydas, which could constitute the main resource in the diet of R. rattus in those periods. Abundance, body condition and distribution of the rats were consistent with heavy predation upon this additional resource.
- 4Synthesis and applications. In island ecosystems invasive rats prey mainly upon seabird eggs and chicks, thereby threatening their populations. Although rats are certainly capable of surviving on terrestrial foods outside the seabird nesting season, their ability to prey upon ephemeral but abundant resources, such as hatchling sea turtles, may contribute to maintaining their populations. This may explain their success on Surprise Island, an ecosystem of extreme conditions, and suggests that biologists and managers working with threatened species should be aware of the possibility of temporary diet shifts by introduced rodents that may cause unexpected heavy predation on these species. This dietary shift from one endangered taxa to another has major implications for the conservation of seabirds and sea turtles world-wide and more generally for the biodiversity of invaded insular communities.

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