Collateral benefits of targeted supplementary feeding on demography and growth rate of a threatened population

Fenn, S. R., Bignal, E. M., Trask, A. E., McCracken, D. I., Monaghan, P. and Reid, J. M. (2020) Collateral benefits of targeted supplementary feeding on demography and growth rate of a threatened population. Journal of Applied Ecology, 57(11), pp. 2212-2221. (doi: 10.1111/1365-2664.13721)

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Abstract

1. Effective evidence-based conservation requires full quantification of the impacts of targeted management interventions on focal populations. Such impacts may extend beyond target individuals to also affect demographic rates of non-target conspecifics (e.g. different age classes). However, such collateral (i.e. unplanned) impacts are rarely evaluated despite their potential to substantially alter conservation outcomes. Subsequent management decisions may then be poorly informed or erroneous. 2. We used 15 years of individual-based demographic data in a ‘before-after control-impact’ (BACI) analysis to quantify collateral demographic impacts of a targeted multi-year supplementary feeding programme designed to increase sub-adult survival and hence viability of a small, threatened red-billed chough Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax population. Specifically, we assessed whether the intervention also affected adult survival and reproductive success, and whether such collateral effects were themselves sufficient to stabilize population size and hence achieve short-term conservation aims. 3. The probabilities of adult survival and successful reproduction increased substantially between the ‘before-feeding’ and ‘during-feeding’ periods in those choughs associated with supplementary feeding, but not otherwise. Overall breeding success (i.e. number of chicks fledged per occupied territory) also tended to increase, even though brood sizes did not increase. These relationships, which were detectible only through BACI analyses, suggest that supplementary feeding targeted at sub-adults had unplanned positive impacts on adult demographic rates. 4. Deterministic matrix models designed to project population growth demonstrate that these estimated collateral effects were sufficient to make a substantial contribution to increasing population growth rate and achieving short-term population stability. 5. Synthesis and applications. Our results indicate substantial positive collateral impacts of a targeted supplementary feeding intervention on population viability, despite no a priori expectation that the non-target adults were food-limited. This casestudy illustrates how thorough assessment of collateral impacts of targeted interventions can affect assessment of short-term efficacy and reveal new opportunities for future interventions, thereby informing subsequent management decisions.

Item Type:Articles
Additional Information:S.R.F. was funded by a Natural Environment Research Council iCASE studentship (NE/P009719/1) supported by SNH. A.E.T. was funded by SNH. D.I.M. was supported by the Scottish Government's 2011–2016 and 2016–2021 Strategic Research Programmes.
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Monaghan, Professor Pat
Authors: Fenn, S. R., Bignal, E. M., Trask, A. E., McCracken, D. I., Monaghan, P., and Reid, J. M.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Biodiversity, One Health & Veterinary Medicine
Journal Name:Journal of Applied Ecology
Publisher:Wiley
ISSN:0021-8901
ISSN (Online):1365-2664
Published Online:24 July 2020

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