Authors
Maldwyn J Evans, Will G Batson, Iain J Gordon, Emily Belton, Tim Chaseling, Don Fletcher, Michael Harrison, Tom McElroy, Alison Mungoven, Jenny Newport, Jenny Pierson, Timothy Portas, Shelley Swain, Claire Wimpenny, Adrian D Manning
Publication date
2021/5
Journal
Biodiversity and Conservation
Volume
30
Pages
1731-1752
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Description
A large component of the anthropogenic biodiversity crisis is the loss of animal species. In response, there has been significant investment in reintroductions of species to their historical ranges. Predation by native and exotic predators, however, remains a barrier to success. Over the past 200 years, Australia has seen the highest rate of mammal extinction on earth, with mammals within a critical weight range (CWR: 35 g–5.5 kg) most affected due to predation by exotic predators. Populations of some threatened species now exist only in Tasmania, offshore islands, or predator-proof sanctuaries. The next critical step is to return native populations outside of predator-free areas, ‘beyond-the-fence’, on the continental mainland. Given our current inability to completely remove exotic predators from mainland ecosystems, how can we achieve successful mammal reintroductions? A potential solution is to drive …
Total citations
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