Effects of different management strategies on long-term trends of Australian threatened and near-threatened mammals

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Author(s)
Tulloch, Ayesha IT
Jackson, Micha V
Bayraktarov, Elisa
Carey, Alexander R
Correa-Gomez, Diego F
Driessen, Michael
Gynther, Ian C
Hardie, Mel
Moseby, Katherine
Joseph, Liana
Preece, Harriet
Suarez-Castro, Andrés Felipe
Stuart, Stephanie
Woinarski, John CZ
Possingham, Hugh P
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2022
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Monitoring is critical to assess management effectiveness, but broadscale systematic assessments of monitoring to evaluate and improve recovery efforts are lacking. We compiled 1,808 timeseries from 71 threatened and near-threatened terrestrial and volant mammal species and subspecies in Australia (48% of eligible threatened mammal taxa), to compare relative trends of populations subject to different management strategies. We adapted the Living Planet Index to develop the Australian Threatened Mammal Index and track aggregate trends for all sampled threatened mammal populations, and for small (<35 g), medium (35-5,500 g) and ...
View more >Monitoring is critical to assess management effectiveness, but broadscale systematic assessments of monitoring to evaluate and improve recovery efforts are lacking. We compiled 1,808 timeseries from 71 threatened and near-threatened terrestrial and volant mammal species and subspecies in Australia (48% of eligible threatened mammal taxa), to compare relative trends of populations subject to different management strategies. We adapted the Living Planet Index to develop the Australian Threatened Mammal Index and track aggregate trends for all sampled threatened mammal populations, and for small (<35 g), medium (35-5,500 g) and large mammals (>5,500 g), between 2000 and 2017. Unmanaged populations (42 taxa) declined by 63% on average between 2000 and 2017, with unmanaged small mammals suffering the greatest declines (96%). Populations of 17 taxa in havens (islands and fenced areas that excluded or eliminated introduced red foxes and domestic cats) increased by 680%. Outside havens, populations undergoing sustained predator baiting initially declined by 75% but subsequently increased to 47% of their abundance in 2000. At sites where predators were not excluded or baited but other actions like fire management and introduced herbivore control occurred, populations of small and medium mammals declined faster, but large mammals slower, than unmanaged populations. Only 13% of taxa had data for both unmanaged and managed populations, but Index comparisons for this subset showed that taxa with populations increasing inside havens declined outside havens, but taxa with populations subject to predator baiting outside havens declined at a slower rate than populations with no management, then increased while unmanaged populations continued to decline. More comprehensive and improved monitoring (particularly encompassing poorly represented management actions and taxonomic groups like bats and small mammals) is required to understand if, and where, management has worked. Improved implementation of management for threats other than predation is critical to recover Australia's threatened mammals. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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View more >Monitoring is critical to assess management effectiveness, but broadscale systematic assessments of monitoring to evaluate and improve recovery efforts are lacking. We compiled 1,808 timeseries from 71 threatened and near-threatened terrestrial and volant mammal species and subspecies in Australia (48% of eligible threatened mammal taxa), to compare relative trends of populations subject to different management strategies. We adapted the Living Planet Index to develop the Australian Threatened Mammal Index and track aggregate trends for all sampled threatened mammal populations, and for small (<35 g), medium (35-5,500 g) and large mammals (>5,500 g), between 2000 and 2017. Unmanaged populations (42 taxa) declined by 63% on average between 2000 and 2017, with unmanaged small mammals suffering the greatest declines (96%). Populations of 17 taxa in havens (islands and fenced areas that excluded or eliminated introduced red foxes and domestic cats) increased by 680%. Outside havens, populations undergoing sustained predator baiting initially declined by 75% but subsequently increased to 47% of their abundance in 2000. At sites where predators were not excluded or baited but other actions like fire management and introduced herbivore control occurred, populations of small and medium mammals declined faster, but large mammals slower, than unmanaged populations. Only 13% of taxa had data for both unmanaged and managed populations, but Index comparisons for this subset showed that taxa with populations increasing inside havens declined outside havens, but taxa with populations subject to predator baiting outside havens declined at a slower rate than populations with no management, then increased while unmanaged populations continued to decline. More comprehensive and improved monitoring (particularly encompassing poorly represented management actions and taxonomic groups like bats and small mammals) is required to understand if, and where, management has worked. Improved implementation of management for threats other than predation is critical to recover Australia's threatened mammals. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
View less >
Journal Title
Conservation Biology
Copyright Statement
© 2022 Society for Conservation Biology. This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Effects of different management strategies on long-term trends of Australian threatened and near-threatened mammals, Conservation Biology, 2022, which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.14032. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Use of Self-Archived Versions. This article may not be enhanced, enriched or otherwise transformed into a derivative work, without express permission from Wiley or by statutory rights under applicable legislation. Copyright notices must not be removed, obscured or modified. The article must be linked to Wiley’s version of record on Wiley Online Library and any embedding, framing or otherwise making available the article or pages thereof by third parties from platforms, services and websites other than Wiley Online Library must be prohibited.
Note
This publication has been entered in Griffith Research Online as an advanced online version.
Subject
Conservation and biodiversity
Environmental assessment and monitoring
Living Planet Index
biodiversity conservation
invasive predator control
long-term ecological monitoring
management effectiveness