Published October 9, 2017 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Climate change leads to increasing population density and impacts of a key island invader

  • 1. Monash University
  • 2. University of Cape Town
  • 3. University of Pretoria
  • 4. University of Victoria
  • 5. Stellenbosch University

Description

The considerable threats of invasive rodents to island biodiversity are likely to be compounded by climate change. Forecasts for such interactions have been most pronounced for the Southern Ocean islands where ameliorating conditions are expected to decrease thermal and resource restrictions on rodents. Firm evidence for changing rodent populations in response to climate change, and demonstrations of associated impacts on the terrestrial environment, are nonetheless entirely absent for the region. Using data collected over three decades on sub-Antarctic Marion Island, we tested empirically whether mouse populations have changed through time and whether these changes can be associated significantly with changing abiotic conditions. Changes in invertebrate populations, which have previously been attributed to mouse predation, but with little explicit demographic analysis, were also examined to determine whether they can be associated with changing mouse populations. The total number of mice on the island at annual peak density increased by 530.0% between 1979-80 and 2008-11. This increase was due to an advanced breeding season, which was robustly related to the number of precipitation-free days during the non-breeding season. Mice directly reduced invertebrate densities, with biomass losses of up to two orders of magnitude in some habitats. Such invertebrate declines are expected to have significant consequences for ecosystem processes over the long term. Our results demonstrate that as climate change continues to create ameliorating conditions for invasive rodents on sub-Antarctic islands, the severity of their impacts will increase. They also emphasize the importance of rodent eradication for the restoration of invaded islands.

Notes

Files

Marion Island mouse SECR.zip

Files (295.9 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:19bd6eff507b6b424a02ffe374f60163
92.7 kB Preview Download
md5:c0d74b0166104a4d881f37480152a553
189.7 kB Preview Download
md5:43b47047a4208f510f1bff89156a5091
3.0 kB Preview Download
md5:670a5dbd3ef7e4bd8a60f72e5c8fc587
10.6 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1002/eap.1642 (DOI)