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January 7, 2002
Native predators become prey when feral pigs rearrange the food web
Biologists document damage on Channel Islands
By Tim Stephens
Feral pigs have created ecological havoc in many parts of California, uprooting native
plants and turning meadows into mudholes. But nowhere have their effects been as
dramatic as on the Channel Islands, where they have caused a complete restructuring
of the food web, threatening the native island fox with extinction.
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| The cat-sized island fox, once the dominant predator on the Channel Islands, is
in danger of extinction on four of the Channel Islands. Golden eagles began preying
on the island fox in the early 1990s. Photos: Gary Roemer |
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A team of biologists has now documented the remarkable extent to which the introduced
pigs have disrupted the island ecosystem. They reported their findings in the scientific
journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (the article was published
online on December 18 and will appear in print in the January 8 issue of the journal).
The story involves not only exotic pigs and native foxes, but also golden eagles
that have recently colonized the islands and a native spotted skunk.
Golden eagles were initially drawn to the islands by the abundance of tasty piglets
on Santa Cruz, the largest of the Channel Islands.
But they began preying on the island fox as well, causing the fox population to
plummet not only on Santa Cruz but also on the nearby islands of Santa Rosa and San
Miguel.
The cat-sized island fox, once the dominant predator in the ecosystem, is rapidly
disappearing. Meanwhile, skunk populations are booming due to reduced competition
from foxes.
"The presence of exotic pigs has totally restructured the food web on Santa
Cruz Island," said Josh Donlan, science director for the nonprofit Island Conservation
and Ecology Group based at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and a coauthor
of the paper.
At first glance, it might appear that feral pigs are outcompeting the foxes, but
the two species are not direct competitors, said lead author Gary Roemer, now at
New Mexico State University.
"This phenomenon is called apparent competition--the two prey species share
a predator that has an asymmetric impact, causing one species to decline," Roemer
said. "This is the first case that documents apparent competition from an exotic
species causing a decline in a native species, and it may be an important mechanism
in the global decline of biodiversity."
Roemer, Donlan, and coauthor Franck Courchamp of the National Center for Scientific
Research in France combined field data with a mathematical model of the competitive
and predatory relationships of the four species to elucidate the changes in food-web
dynamics on the islands.
The feral pigs enabled golden eagles to colonize the islands by providing an abundant
food source, said Roemer, who began studying the foxes on Santa Cruz Island in 1993
as a graduate student at UCLA. He first found evidence of eagles preying on foxes
in 1994, but it wasn't until the following year that he saw the fox population start
to decline. "As the study progressed, it became clear that eagle predation was
taking a toll on the foxes," he said.
Island foxes are more vulnerable to golden eagle predation than pigs or skunks due
to basic differences in the natural histories of the three prey species, Donlan said.
Feral pigs reproduce rapidly and can produce large litters throughout the year, and
piglets that survive eventually grow too big to be prey for golden eagles. Skunks
are nocturnal, so are only occasionally preyed on by eagles, which hunt during the
day. The foxes, however, are active both at night and during the day, have just one
small litter in the spring, and both pups and adults are preyed on by golden eagles.
"The foxes are a nice eagle meal for their entire lives, and they are often
active during the day, so they are constantly preyed on by the eagles," Donlan
said.
Pigs were introduced to Santa Cruz Island during the 1850s, along with sheep; yet
golden eagles didn't become a problem until the 1990s. A resident population of bald
eagles on the islands may have kept golden eagles at bay, but by 1960 the bald eagles
had died out due to hunting and DDT pollution, said Brian Latta, a biologist with
the Santa Cruz Predatory Bird Research Group based at UCSC.
"Bald eagles are highly territorial, and they would nest on the perimeter of
the islands because their diet is mostly marine-based," said Latta, who has
been capturing golden eagles on Santa Cruz Island and relocating them to the mainland
in cooperation with the National Park Service and other agencies. "We can only
speculate as to why golden eagles started eating foxes in the early 1990s, but it
seems there were enough living year-round on the island by then to start having an
impact on the fox population," he said.
Channel Islands National Park encompasses five of the eight Channel Islands, including
the three where golden eagle predation has caused fox populations to plummet. Foxes
also occur on three southern islands where eagles are not a problem, but on one of
them, Santa Catalina, the foxes were decimated by distemper virus introduced in 1998,
Roemer said.
The National Park Service launched a major effort in 1999 to save the island fox,
which has been proposed for listing as an endangered species. In addition to Latta's
golden eagle relocation project, a pig eradication project is planned to start next
year on Santa Cruz Island, in cooperation with the Nature Conservancy, which owns
76 percent of the island. Captive breeding of foxes is under way on San Miguel (where
only one fox is left in the wild) and on Santa Rosa (where no wild foxes remain).
Fewer than 100 foxes remain on Santa Cruz, where captive breeding is also being considered.
Although eradication of the feral pigs on Santa Cruz Island won't be easy, Roemer
and Donlan said chances are good for a recovery of the fox populations. "I think
it can happen, but it will take a lot of work and a lot of resources," Donlan
said.
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