Authors
Deborah J Wilson, John G Innes, Neil B Fitzgerald, Scott Bartlam, Corinne Watts, Mark C Smale
Publication date
2018/1/1
Journal
New Zealand Journal of Ecology
Volume
42
Issue
2
Pages
192-203
Publisher
New Zealand Ecological Society
Description
Mesopredator and competitor release can lead to population increases of invasive house mice (Mus musculus) after larger introduced mammals are controlled or eradicated. In New Zealand, mammal-resistant fences have enabled multi-species mammal eradications in order to protect indigenous species. When house mice are the only mammals remaining in these biodiversity sanctuaries, they may reach a high population density, with potential consequences for their indigenous prey. We studied mouse populations in the absence of other mammals for 5 years at mammal-resistant fenced forest sites at Maungatautari, Waikato. We used spatially explicit capture–recapture (SECR) to estimate mouse population density quarterly in two independently fenced sites, with contrasting levels of mouse management that were switched half-way through the study. In the absence of mouse control, mouse population density …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
DJ Wilson, JG Innes, NB Fitzgerald, S Bartlam, C Watts… - New Zealand Journal of Ecology, 2018