Department of Zoology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Manaaki Whenua-Landcare Research, Lincoln, New Zealand.
Ecol Appl. 2024 Apr;34(3):e2949. doi: 10.1002/eap.2949. Epub 2024 Mar 5.
Invasive mammal eradications are increasingly attempted across large, complex landscapes. Sequentially controlled management zones can be at risk of reinvasion from adjacent uncontrolled areas, and managers must weigh the relative benefits of ensuring complete elimination from a zone or minimizing reinvasion risk. This is complicated in urban areas, where habitat heterogeneity and a lack of baseline ecological knowledge increase uncertainty. We applied a spatial agent-based model to predict the reinvasion of a well-studied species, the brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula), across an urban area onto a peninsula that is the site of an elimination campaign in Aotearoa New Zealand. We represented fine-scale urban habitat heterogeneity in a land cover layer and tested management scenarios that varied four factors: the density of possums remaining following an elimination attempt, the maintenance trap density on the peninsula, and effort expended toward preventing reinvasion by means of a high-density trap buffer at the peninsula isthmus or control of the source population adjacent to the peninsula. We found that achieving complete elimination on the peninsula was crucial to avoid rapid repopulation. The urban isthmus was predicted to act as a landscape barrier and restrict immigration onto the peninsula, but reliance on this barrier alone would fail to prevent repopulation. In combination, complete elimination, buffer zone, and source population control could reduce the probability of possum repopulation to near zero. Our findings support urban landscape barriers as one tool for sequential invasive mammal elimination but reaffirm that novel methods to expose residual individuals to control will be necessary to secure elimination in management zones. Work to characterize the urban ecology of many invasive mammals is still needed.
在大型、复杂的景观中,越来越多地尝试进行入侵哺乳动物的根除。顺序控制的管理区可能会面临来自相邻未控制区域的再次入侵的风险,管理者必须权衡从一个区域确保完全消除或最小化再入侵风险的相对益处。在城市地区,由于栖息地异质性和缺乏基线生态知识,情况变得更加复杂,增加了不确定性。我们应用了一个基于空间代理的模型,预测了在新西兰奥塔哥一个已经进行过根除活动的半岛上,一种经过充分研究的物种——帚尾袋貂(Trichosurus vulpecula),从一个城市地区再次入侵的情况。我们在一个土地覆盖层中表示了细粒度的城市生境异质性,并测试了管理方案,这些方案在四个因素上有所不同:根除尝试后剩余袋貂的密度、半岛上维持的陷阱密度,以及通过半岛地峡的高密度陷阱缓冲区或控制与半岛相邻的源种群来防止再入侵的努力。我们发现,在半岛上实现完全根除对于避免快速重新定居至关重要。预测城市地峡将起到景观屏障的作用,并限制移民进入半岛,但仅依赖这个屏障将无法防止重新定居。综合运用完全根除、缓冲区和源种群控制,可以将袋貂重新定居的可能性降低到接近零。我们的研究结果支持城市景观屏障作为顺序入侵哺乳动物根除的一种工具,但再次确认,为了确保在管理区中进行根除,必须开发新的方法来使残余个体暴露于控制之下。仍需要对许多入侵哺乳动物的城市生态进行研究。