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  1. #1

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    Killer mice eat baby albatross on remote island

    Killer mice eat baby albatross on remote island


    LONDON, England (CNN) -- Predatory mice are threatening the albatross population on a remote south Atlantic island and have caused the birds' worst nesting season on record, a British bird charity says.
    Baby albatross on a remote Atlantic island are threatened by killer house mice.




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    The research from the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds indicates bad news for the Tristan albatross, whose only home is Gough Island in the middle of the south Atlantic. House mice not native to the island are threatening the Tristan albatross with extinction, the RSPB said.

    The mice are also threatening the native population of bunting, one of the world's largest finches, the RSPB said.
    "Without removal of the mice, both the albatross and the bunting that live there are doomed to extinction," Grahame Madge, a conservation spokesman for the RSPB, told CNN.

    The mice on the island eat the chicks of the albatross and bunting before they make it to the fledgling stage, the RSPB said. This makes it especially difficult for the albatross population to survive because the birds lay eggs only once every two years -- a very low reproductive rate compared to other birds, Madge said.
    "What [the mice] are affecting is the ability of the albatross to produce enough young to sustain the population," he said.

    Adult Tristan albatross are threatened by longline fishing at sea, a practice in which boats put up numerous 100-meter long fishing lines baited with squid or fish. The albatrosses are attracted to the bait and while some manage to steal it successfully, many more get snagged and drown, Madge said.
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    Because of the impact from house mice, introduced to the island by sealers in the 18th and 19th centuries, conservation alliance BirdLife International earlier this year listed both the Tristan albatross and the Gough bunting as critically endangered -- the highest threat level before extinction.

    Gough Island, a British territory almost midway between Argentina and South Africa, is a place of stunning natural beauty.

    The island is not inhabited by humans. Gough Island and nearby Inaccessible Island are both listed as UNESCO World Heritage sites.

    A survey of the albatross on Gough Island in January showed 1,764 adults incubating eggs, the RSPB said. A later survey revealed only 246 chicks had survived to fledgling.
    "We've known for a long time that the mice were killing albatross chicks in huge numbers," said RSPB scientist Richard Cuthbert, who recently visited the island to assess the problem. "However, we now know that the albatrosses have suffered their worst year on record."

    The bunting suffer because the mice eat their eggs and chicks, and may also compete with them for food in the winter, Cuthbert said.
    "The decline in bunting numbers is alarming," said Peter Ryan of the University of Cape Town, who has been studying buntings on the island since the 1980s. "Without urgent conservation action to remove the mice, both the albatross and the bunting are living on borrowed time."

    The RSPB has been studying whether it is possible to remove the mice. It said trials so far look promising, but it urged the British government to step up funding for the project. It said eradicating the mice from Gough Island would solve the primary conservation threat facing both bird species.

    The RSPB said it had been working with New Zealand conservationists on a program to remove the smaller mice by dropping poisoned bait from helicopters.
    Tristan albatrosses are one of 22 species of albatross in the world. Albatrosses principally live in the southern Atlantic but some also live in the Pacific, the RSPB says.

    Albatrosses are among the largest flying birds, weighing up to 25 pounds (22.5 kilograms). One species -- the wandering albatross -- has a wingspan of 11 feet, the RSPB says.

    The birds can fly thousands of miles without a pause, and their only need to touch land is to nest and raise their young, the RSPB says.


  2. #2
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    blackgang's Avatar
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    About time to get out there and open a bunch of D-CON and do a number on the mice, worthless bastards anyway.

  3. #3
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    Perhaps they could release some cats to eat the mice?

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    We had a similar problem here with pests that threatened the Gould's Petrel which bred on a nearby island. This is the only place in the world where this bird breeds, and after a successful recovery plan, their numbers have risen from 200 to near 900. It can be done.

    Gould’s Petrel - Pterodroma leucoptera

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    Quote Originally Posted by Panda
    Perhaps they could release some cats to eat the mice?
    No, Never happen, the cats kill more ground nesting birds than the mice would kill, between them and skunks the western USA is damn near devoid of upland game as they are ground nesters and they have came under heavy pressure from both skunks and house cats, There used to be great pheasant hunting at Grantsville Utah and last time I was there the pheasant population was nil as they had been killed off by skunks and cats.

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    ^ perhaps I should have added a smiley.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Panda View Post
    Perhaps they could release some cats to eat the mice?



    unfortunately it is a thinking that has been used previously.

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Panda View Post
    ^ perhaps I should have added a smiley.
    Doesn't work with him Pandy. He doesn't get it.

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    Not when it comes from Panda, thats his normal thinking and now he trying to cover the cat shit.

    He just like Rural Surin, he just doesn't think before he flaps his lips.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by blackgang
    he just doesn't think before he flaps his lips.
    funny you should say that.....


  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by kingwilly
    funny you should say that.....
    Didn't think that you needed mentioning as you havent been posting to much on this thread, but glad that you did bring it up.

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    ....still doesn't get it

  13. #13
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    i think he gets it now, but is too pigheaded stuopid to admit it..


    Quote Originally Posted by Rural Surin View Post
    ....still doesn't get it

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    In the early 1990s a survey of the endangered Gould’s Petrel found numbers had dwindled alarmingly to around 200 nesting pairs. In addition, offspring numbers were declining and they were only breeding at one location, Cabbage Tree Island, near Port Stephens on Australia's East Coast. The rescue of the Gould's Petrel became one of the most amazing conservation successes in history and triggered headlines in newspapers around the world.
    The decline of the birds began in 1906 when rabbits were introduced to the island. Their number s multiplied and within a short time they had eaten understorey plants, leaving the petrels vulnerable to attacks by Pied Currawongs. Sticky fruit from the Bird-lime Tree entangled chicks and adults as it found its way to the forest floor.
    Backed by the Foundation for National Parks & Wildlife, scientists Nick Carlile and David Priddel undertook a highly innovative and scientifically based recovery program that has successfully rescued the Gould’s Petrel from the brink of extinction.
    During 1997 to 1999 the NPWS eradicated rabbits from the island and introduced control measures for both the currawongs and the Bird-lime trees in the breeding areas. Eventually the understorey plants will regenerate and the natural ecological balance will be restored.


    Quote Originally Posted by Johnny Longprong
    We had a similar problem here with pests that threatened the Gould's Petrel which bred on a nearby island. This is the only place in the world where this bird breeds, and after a successful recovery plan, their numbers have risen from 200 to near 900. It can be done

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    I doubt they'll be able to eliminate the mice population from the island, although they may be able to reduce their numbers.

    Construction of 'mice proof' nesting boxes- that mice and other predators can't get to- would be a more effective measure to ensure the survival of the species short term. While you work on reducing the rodent population.

    Releasing feral cats would be an absolute disaster for the ecosystem- they are a bastard of a predator. They've already been responsible for wiping out much of Australia's small marsupial population. When I was in the Navy, I was a volunteer that helped with trapping and killing feral cats in the Jervis Bay national park. Can't say I enjoyed killing 'em, but it got me off base and was ultimately for a good cause. Pet cats in places like Australia should be neutered except under controlled breeding conditions, strays and ferals destroyed on sight.

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    Quote Originally Posted by kingwilly View Post
    i think he gets it now, but is too pigheaded stuopid to admit it..


    Quote Originally Posted by Rural Surin View Post
    ....still doesn't get it
    though there is the sarcasm recognition - dementia link

  17. #17
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    Here's the answer.



    Oops, never mind!


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    ^ You got it. Several ecological disasters have been unleashed by well meant but ultimately dumb release of a non-native predator to control the numbers of another introduced pest.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Norton View Post
    Here's the answer.



    Oops, never mind!



  20. #20
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    What is clearly needed is a Gough Islands task farce. Send in HMS Invincible.

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    Quote Originally Posted by sabang
    Construction of 'mice proof' nesting boxes- that mice and other predators can't get to- would be a more effective measure to ensure the survival of the species short term. While you work on reducing the rodent population.
    Good idea Sabang, but only for birds that nest in a box or something similar, like Blue Birds or House sparrows, but I do not think Albatross will nest in a box as I think they build a nest out of seaweed and sticks on the ground as do most sea birds, some do not even build a nest but jkust lay on the ground above a rock or ledge and the eggs troll down til they are stopped and then set on an egg, I do not think that they are particular what egg they set on.
    I was on the Farallon Island light on the SE Farallon out of San Francisco for a year keeping the engines running for power for the light, radios and fog horns and we had sea birds by the thousands as well as some European hares that the Russians had when they owned the islands, and it is a bird sanctuary so did see how a number of them nest and live.
    OH yes, and we could have a dog as a pet, but no cats allowed.

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