Rats and prions at Tristan da Cunha Island

Research Article

Rats and prions at Tristan da Cunha Island

Published in: Ostrich: Journal of African Ornithology
Volume 91 , issue 3 , 2020 , pages: 240–243
DOI: 10.2989/00306525.2020.1771622
Author(s): Ben J Dilley , South Africa , Delia Davies , South Africa , Julian Repetto , United Kingdom (South Atlantic Ocean) , George Swain , United Kingdom (South Atlantic Ocean) , Peter G Ryan , South Africa

Abstract

Tristan da Cunha is a 96 km2 volcanic island in the South Atlantic Ocean. Black Rats Rattus rattus reached the island from a shipwreck in 1882 and their depredation of seabirds’ eggs and chicks are likely partly responsible for the much lower densities of burrow-nesting petrels, compared with adjacent rodent-free islands in the archipelago. We monitored a colony of Broad-billed Prions Pachyptila vittata breeding in a coastal cliff cave in 2015/2016, where a maximum of 6% of chicks survived from 310 nests. We suspect rats frequently depredated eggs (36% of eggs were found broken with rat bite marks) and infrared trail cameras recorded how rats repeatedly hassled chicks, although no direct chick depredations were recorded.

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