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Wiley InterScience

Animal Conservation

Animal Conservation

Volume 10 Issue 3, Pages 320 - 325

Published Online: 30 May 2007

Journal compilation © 2010 The Zoological Society of London



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Urban bird declines and the fear of cats
A. P. Beckerman 1 , M.Boots 1 & K. J. Gaston 1
  1 Department of Animal & Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK
  Correspondence
Dr Andrew P. Beckerman, Department of Animal & Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK. Tel: +44 0 114 222 0026
Email: a.beckerman@sheffield.ac.uk
Copyright © 2007 The Zoological Society of London
KEYWORDS
urban bird decline • predation risk • sub-lethal effects • fear • Felis catus

ABSTRACT

The role of domestic cats Felis catus in the troubling, on-going decline of many urban bird populations in the UK is controversial. Debate, in the UK and elsewhere, has centred on the level of avian mortality directly imposed by cats, and on whether this is principally compensatory (the 'doomed surplus' hypothesis) or additive (the 'hapless survivor' hypothesis). However, it is well established that predators also have indirect, sub-lethal effects on their prey where life-history responses to predation risk affect birth and death rates. Here, using a simple model combining cat predation on birds with a sub-lethal (fear) effect of cat density on bird fecundity, we show that these sub-lethal effects may be substantial for urban songbirds. When cat densities are as high as has been recorded in the UK, and even when predation mortality is low (e.g. <1%), a small reduction in fecundity due to sub-lethal effects (e.g. <1 offspring year−1 cat−1) can result in marked decreases in bird abundances (up to 95%). Thus, low predation rates in urban areas do not necessarily equate with a correspondingly low impact of cats on birds. Sub-lethal effects may depress bird populations to such an extent that low predation rates simply reflect low prey numbers.


Received 30 October 2006; accepted 28 March 2007

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1469-1795.2007.00115.x About DOI

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