Ecology and Conservation Of the Endangered Forty-spotted Pardalote
Abstract
The forty-spotted pardalote (Pardalotus quadragintus)
is an endangered songbird endemic to eastern Tasmania. These
birds specialize on forests containing Eucalyptus viminalis
(white gum tree) for foraging, and require tree cavities for
nesting. They have experienced both historical range contraction
following European settlement and recent population decline
within existing habitat. Causes of this decline are uncertain.
Ecological theory predicts that habitat specialists will be most
vulnerable to habitat loss, rather than factors that disrupt the
balance of fecundity and mortality. However, cavity-nesting birds
tend to invest heavily in individual nest attempts, and as a
result, may be vulnerable to competitors, predators, or parasites
which attack the nest. To examine current threats to
forty-spotted pardalotes, I conducted three seasons of fieldwork
in southeastern Tasmania, monitoring the breeding biology of
forty-spotted pardalotes and their generalist competitors,
striated pardalotes (Pardalotus striatus). I also collected blood
samples from forty-spotted pardalotes to examine their population
structure and demographic history. A model presentation
experiment and observations of nest takeovers revealed that
striated pardalotes were the dominant competitor and usurped 10%
of forty-spotted pardalote nests, whereas forty-spotted
pardalotes never usurped striated pardalotes. However, the
largest source of nest failure was a native ectoparasitic fly
(Passeromyia longicornis) which killed 81% of nestlings.
Encouragingly, I found that forty-spotted pardalotes occupied
nest boxes, resulting in high breeding densities and similar nest
success compared to natural cavities. Finally, I developed a
dataset of 57,868 SNPs from 159 individual birds sampled
throughout major populations in southeastern Tasmania. Despite
its larger population size, Maria Island had the least genetic
diversity of any population, and there was no evidence of
migrants between it and the southern populations. There was
little differentiation and substantial gene flow between Bruny
Island and the nearby mainland populations, as well as evidence
of ancestry from an extirpated mainland population. This study
shows that conservation of habitat specialists needs to include
protection of habitat features such as tree cavities and the
extent of E. viminalis forest, but also needs to address threats
within existing habitat, such as nest parasites. My finding that
a native fly parasite is the principal source of mortality in
forty-spotted pardalote nestlings adds to growing concern about
the increasing impacts of avian ectoparasites on their hosts in
island systems.
Description
Keywords
forty-spotted pardalote, Pardalotus quadragintus, Passeromyia longicornis, Tasmania, Bruny Island, Maria Island, Tinderbox Peninsula, ectoparasite, host-parasite relationship, myiasis, endangered species, conservation, competition, nest hollow, tree cavity, breeding biology, population genetics, nest box
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description