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Diets of sympatric native and introduced carnivores in the Barrington Tops,eastern Australia
Authors:A. S. GLEN  M. PENNAY  C. R. DICKMAN  B. A. WINTLE  K. B. FIRESTONE
Affiliation:1. Department of Environment & Conservation and Invasive Animals CRC, Dwellingup Research Centre, Banksiadale Road, Dwellingup, Western Australia 6213,;2. Landcare Research, PO Box 40, Lincoln 7640, New Zealand (Email: glena@landcareresearch.co.nz);3. Department of Environment Climate Change and Water, Queanbeyan,;4. School of Biological Sciences A08, University of Sydney, Sydney,;5. Applied Environmental Decision Analysis, School of Botany, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia;6. and;7. School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney,;8. Australasian Conservation Genetics Centre, Zoological Parks Board of NSW, Mosman, New South Wales, and
Abstract:Invasive predators have severe impacts on global biodiversity, and their effects in Australia have been more extreme than on any other continent. The spotted‐tailed quoll (Dasyurus maculatus), an endangered marsupial carnivore, coexists with three eutherian carnivores, the red fox (Vulpes vulpes), feral cat (Felis catus) and wild dog (Canis lupus ssp.) with which it did not coevolve. No previous study has investigated dietary overlap between quolls and the suite of three eutherian carnivores. By analysing scats, we aimed to quantify dietary overlap within this carnivore assemblage in eastern Australia, and to detect any differences that may facilitate coexistence. We also sought evidence of intraguild predation. Dietary overlap between predators was extensive, with the greatest similarity occurring between foxes and cats. However, some differences were apparent. For example, cats mainly consumed smaller prey, and wild dogs larger prey. Quolls showed greater dietary overlap with foxes and cats than with dogs. Intraguild predation was evident, with fox remains occurring in 3% of wild dog scats. Our results suggest wild dogs competitively dominate invasive foxes, which in turn are likely to compete with the endangered quoll.
Keywords:Bayesian analysis  competition  intraguild predation  invasive species  mesopredator release  niche overlap
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