Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/66487
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Type: Journal article
Title: Interference competition between introduced black rats and endemic Galápagos rice rats
Other Titles: Interference competition between introduced black rats and endemic Galapagos rice rats
Author: Harris, D.
Macdonald, D.
Citation: Ecology, 2007; 88(9):2330-2344
Publisher: Ecological Soc Amer
Issue Date: 2007
ISSN: 0012-9658
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Donna B. Harris and David W. Macdonald
Abstract: Replicated field experiments were used to quantify and to describe the mechanism of competition between the introduced black rat Rattus rattus and the endemic Santiago rice rat Nesoryzomys swarthi on Santiago Island, Galápagos Islands, Ecuador. The removal of R. rattus significantly slowed the rate of seasonal population decline in N. swarthi. This effect was particularly evident for female, relative to male, N. swarthi and appeared to be driven solely by enhanced immigration; no other fitness or space use parameters were affected. The candidate hypotheses to explain the mechanism of competition were exploitation competition, interference by resource defense, and interference by aggressive encounter. To distinguish between hypotheses, we conducted a replicated resource supplementation experiment with patchy food, scattered food, and no food (control) treatments. The opportunistic R. rattus responded to the extra resources with increased adult immigration and juvenile recruitment, resulting in a significant abundance boost of sevenfold on patchy grids and fourfold on scattered grids. Females increased in body mass, and the breeding season was lengthened. In contrast, there was no change in the abundance of N. swarthi and no obvious benefit to reproduction. Instead, the costs of interference apparently outweighed the benefits of extra food: female N. swarthi increased in mass with supplementary food, but female (relative to male) immigration and residency were repressed on all supplemented areas. This response supported the hypothesis of interference by aggressive encounter, and we were able to rule out the alternative hypotheses. Although periodic population crashes of R. rattus on the arid north coast of Santiago may ameliorate its competitive impact, climate change may tip the balance. Control or eradication of R. rattus should improve future survival prospects for N. swarthi, but wildlife managers must be prepared for the potential eruption of the introduced house mouse Mus musculus, because this species experienced a release from interference competition and immigrated to removal areas.
Keywords: coexistence
encounter interference
food supplementation
interspecific competition
introduced species
Mus musculus
Nesoryzomys swarthi
press experiment
Rattus rattus
removal experiment
Santiago Island
Galápagos
sex-mediated competition
Rights: © 2007 by the Ecological Society of America
DOI: 10.1890/06-1701.1
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/06-1701.1
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 5
Earth and Environmental Sciences publications

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