The Monito Island Experience
Transcription
The Monito Island Experience
The Monito Island Experience Department of Natural and Environmental Resources • M.A. García • R. López • F. Nuñez U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service • • • • J.P Zegarra I. Llerandi-Román J.A. Cruz-Burgos O. Monsegur University of Puerto Rico-Río Piedras • C. Figuerola • Puerto Rico Department of Natural Resources and Environment • Toledo Zoo (USA) • U.S. Fish and Wildlife-Caribbean Ecological Services Field Office • USA Coast Guard • University of Puerto Rico • Island Conservation • Alberto Álvarez/Carlos Diez Eddie Ventosa • Orca Too Crew Monito Island 16 ha (40ac) uninhabited Mona Island 5,519 ha uninhabited • Limestone Island completely surrounded by cliffs. • Inaccessible compared to the rest of the islands of the archipelago. • Located about 4.7 km (3 miles) northwest of Mona Island and about 80 km (50 miles) off the western coast of Puerto Rico. • Covered with xeric scrub vegetation within the Subtropical Dry Forest Life Zone. • Endemic Gecko (Sphaerodactylus micropithecus) • Harrisia portoricensis (endemic columnar cactus restricted to Mona, Monito and Desecheo) • Yellow-Shouldered Blackbird (Agelaius xhantomus) • Important sea bird nesting colonies • Bobbies (masked, brown, red footed) • Frigatebirds Omar Monsegur USFWS • High Biodiversity of Habitats and Species • High Percentage of Endemic Species Raised reef • High Extinction Rates Mangrove islands Lowland dry limestone Volcanic & sedimentary • To provide a summary of the restoration implemented-a rat eradication program • To provide a summary of the 15 year posteradication evaluation • To outline the results and next steps after the post-eradication evaluation • First eradication campaign-October 1992-April 1993 Two poisoning episodes: – Maki mini blocks (Bromadiolone 0.05%) – Ca. 297 kg rodenticide – 10 m fixed baiting points (no baiting station) – 1 rat survey transect (120 m) – 100 % human resources (no helicopters) • Project stopped on March 1993 due to a “Violation” to the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) “Potential poison ingestion by the Monito Island Gecko” A bioessay was conducted and showed that geckos were not attracted to poison First poisoning Six months later Project stopped 2nd Eradication Program • Second eradication campaign-October 1998 Three poisoning episodes: – Talon G (brodifacoum) – Ca. 408.6 kg rodenticide – 20 m fixed baiting stations – 3 rat survey transects (100 m each one) – Helicopter and human resources • Five rat surveys conducted in 1999 • No rats were caught on snap traps • Low rat presence was detected even before poisoning • No rats detected after poisoning • Interagency effort (PRDNER, USFWS, UPR-RP) • Conducted by 8 wildlife biologists • Two nights – 3 days effort • Rat surveys • 27 snap traps (20 m apart) = 540 m long transect • 70 plastic chewing pieces (10 m apart) • All snap traps and chewing sticks were verified around 6:30 AM every morning (2 nights). • All snap traps that were triggered still had bait on them • Food items were intentionally left out around the camp area during the night. • No rats trapped on any trap or chewing stick, no rats observed around the Island • All evidence indicates that Monito Island has been rat free probably since September 1999. • García et al. 2002-Rat Surveys September 1999, rats not detected/observed. • Anderson and Steeves 2000- Bird Surveys, rats not detected/observed (this was not a rat survey). • R. López (PRDNER) 2005- visited the Island to conduct sea bird study and did not see rats. • Monito Island Gecko • Marine Birds • Higo Chumbo- Harrisia cactus DATE RESULTS (# geckos) REFERENCE 24-25 August 1982 18 Dodd and Ortiz 1983 1-2-3 May 1984 4 Hammerson 1984 1988 0 September 1992 4 October 1992 3 February 1993 13 July 1993 0 García (unpublished report) • Surveys were conducted the first and third nights of the trip. • Surveys consisted on actively searching all the habitats and substrates. • The majority of the geckos detected were seen on exposed substrates and not hidden under rocks or litter. Date Number of Monito geckos detected Day 1 6-7 Day 2 1 Day 3 23 Type of Habitat Rocky substrate Soil substrate Rocky substrate Rocky substrate Rocky substrate Mixed substrate (leaf litter under a ficus mixed with rocks) Total Birds Detected Masked booby (Sula dactylatra) Brown booby (Sula leucogaster) Red-footed booby (Sula sula) Frigatebird (Fregata magnificens) Yellow-shouldered blackbird (Agelaius xanthomus) Total Age Class Adult Juvenile Fledgling & Hatchling Adult Juvenile Fledgling & Hatchling Adult Juvenile Fledgling & Hatchling Adult Juvenile/Hatchling/Fledgling All classes Number Birds Detected 430 155 36 430 414 97 290 34 8 79 278 47 2,298 • The island was divided in 3 parcels (Parcel #1 - West, Parcel #2 - Center, Parcel #3 - East). • All the parcels were surveyed at the same time (5pm – 7pm) by 7 biologists. • All the birds detected perched were included in the sample. • Birds that were flying were not included in the sample. Therefore, we acknowledge marine bird populations were slightly underestimated during the survey. Green dots indicate tagged individuals or clusters of individuals. Red polygon: area where the individuals were not tagged (# individuals was estimated from the nearest highest point. • Basically absent in areas with vegetation cover greater than 2 m and areas occupied by the core of the seabird colony (center of the island) • We counted approximately 136 individuals [98 adults and 38 juveniles]. No seedlings were documented • 58 tagged individuals height and # of branches data for 60 individuals • The majority (85%) of the tagged individuals taller than 1 m with an avg. height of 1.6 m (indicating a population structure composed mostly by mature “old” individuals) • About 90 % of the tagged individuals with evidence of undetermined lesions due to fungi or bacteria (higher severity of the lesions associated to the taller individuals) • There was not evidence of Harrisia cacti mealybug • To Conduct Monito Gecko Population Surveys / Estimates • To Conduct Marine Birds Population Censuses • Monito Gecko downlisting to threatened in the next two years and eventual delisting in 5 years? • Post-delisting monitoring surveys during the next 5 years