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sl8

(13,789 posts)
Wed Jun 13, 2018, 09:47 PM Jun 2018

The perils of paradise: an endangered species conserved on an island loses antipredator ...

From http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/14/6/20180222

The perils of paradise: an endangered species conserved on an island loses antipredator behaviours within 13 generations

Abstract

When imperilled by a threatening process, the choice is often made to conserve threatened species on offshore islands that typically lack the full suite of mainland predators. While keeping the species extant, this releases the conserved population from predator-driven natural selection. Antipredator traits are no longer maintained by natural selection and may be lost. It is implicitly assumed that such trait loss will happen slowly, but there are few empirical tests. In Australia, northern quolls (Dasyurus hallucatus) were moved onto a predator-free offshore island in 2003 to protect the species from the arrival of invasive cane toads on the mainland. We compared the antipredator behaviours of wild-caught quolls from the predator-rich mainland with those from this predator-free island. We compared the responses of both wild-caught animals and their captive-born offspring, to olfactory cues of two of their major predators (feral cats and dingoes). Wild-caught, mainland quolls recognized and avoided predator scents, as did their captive-born offspring. Island quolls, isolated from these predators for only 13 generations, showed no recognition or aversion to these predators. This study suggests that predator aversion behaviours can be lost very rapidly, and that this may make a population unsuitable for reintroduction to a predator-rich mainland.

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The perils of paradise: an endangered species conserved on an island loses antipredator ... (Original Post) sl8 Jun 2018 OP
Case in point: suburban deer pscot Jun 2018 #1
Quolls are beautiful little critters. Judi Lynn Jun 2018 #2

Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
2. Quolls are beautiful little critters.
Thu Jun 14, 2018, 10:46 PM
Jun 2018


Many more quolls:

https://tinyurl.com/y77x9s3t

Incredible variety of fascinating creatures in this world. It really could cause some people to really take time to marvel about it all, and wonder how and why there are so many wonderful life forms, and why spiritually diseased people treat them so hideously.

If only something can be done to keep the surviving ones from being destroyed, too.
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