When pets go wild: Integrating DNA metabarcoding and morphological analyses to investigate the impacts of free-ranging cats (Felis catus) on oceanic islands

IF 4.9 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Alexandra Galão , Elena J. Soto , João Nunes , Nuno M. Pedroso , Ricardo Rocha , Catarina Rato
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Abstract

Oceanic island ecosystems are particularly vulnerable to the impacts of introduced mammalian predators. Among these, free-ranging cats (Felis catus) are especially detrimental, and have been linked to the extinction and population decline of numerous insular taxa. Yet, a more holistic understanding of the impacts of free-ranging cats has been hampered by an incomplete understanding of their diet and population densities. Using a peri-urban protected area in the subtropical Madeira Island as a case study, we combined DNA metabarcoding, morphological scat analyses, and camera trapping to investigate the magnitude of native and introduced prey consumption by cats. Based on 58 scats collected over the summer and autumn of 2021, we found that cats consume over 20 distinct taxa from ten orders, including native and non-native prey, as well as taxa associated with anthropogenic food. Cat diet was seasonally modulated, with a higher incidence of reptiles in the summer months. Although DNA metabarcoding revealed a higher diversity of prey taxa compared to traditional morphological scat analyses, both methods provided complementary insights, highlighting the benefits of their combined use. Combining our diet results with a free-ranging cat density of 1.4 cats/km2, as revealed by the protected area-wide camera trap survey, we estimate an annual prey intake of over 18,000 vertebrates by cats in a protected area of 7.5 km2, of which over one-third corresponds to native birds and reptiles. These findings underscore the complex interactions between cats and native wildlife, emphasising the need for targeted conservation strategies in ecologically sensitive areas.
当宠物变野:整合DNA元条形码和形态分析来调查自由放养的猫(猫科动物)对海洋岛屿的影响
海洋岛屿生态系统特别容易受到引入的哺乳动物捕食者的影响。其中,自由放养的猫(Felis catus)尤其有害,并与许多岛屿分类群的灭绝和数量下降有关。然而,对自由放养的猫的影响的更全面的理解受到对它们的饮食和种群密度的不完整理解的阻碍。本文以亚热带马德拉岛的近郊城市保护区为例,结合DNA元条形码、形态学粪便分析和相机诱捕,研究了猫对本地和外来猎物的消耗程度。根据2021年夏秋两季收集的58种猫的粪便,我们发现猫消耗了来自10目的20多个不同的分类群,包括本地和非本地猎物,以及与人为食物相关的分类群。猫的饮食是季节性调整的,在夏季,爬行动物的发病率较高。尽管DNA元条形码显示的猎物类群多样性高于传统的形态学分析,但这两种方法提供了互补的见解,突出了它们联合使用的好处。结合我们的饮食结果和保护区范围内相机陷阱调查显示的1.4只猫/平方公里的自由放养猫密度,我们估计在7.5平方公里的保护区内,猫每年捕获超过18,000只脊椎动物,其中超过三分之一对应于本地鸟类和爬行动物。这些发现强调了猫与本地野生动物之间复杂的相互作用,强调了在生态敏感地区采取有针对性的保护策略的必要性。
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来源期刊
Biological Conservation
Biological Conservation 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
10.20
自引率
3.40%
发文量
295
审稿时长
61 days
期刊介绍: Biological Conservation is an international leading journal in the discipline of conservation biology. The journal publishes articles spanning a diverse range of fields that contribute to the biological, sociological, and economic dimensions of conservation and natural resource management. The primary aim of Biological Conservation is the publication of high-quality papers that advance the science and practice of conservation, or which demonstrate the application of conservation principles for natural resource management and policy. Therefore it will be of interest to a broad international readership.
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