Journal article

Considering Extinction of Dependent Species during Translocation, Ex Situ Conservation, and Assisted Migration of Threatened Hosts

ML Moir, PA Vesk, KEC Brennan, R Poulin, L Hughes, DA Keith, MA McCarthy, DJ Coates

Conservation Biology | Published : 2012

Abstract

Translocation, introduction, reintroduction, and assisted migrations are species conservation strategies that are attracting increasing attention, especially in the face of climate change. However, preventing the extinction of the suite of dependent species whose host species are threatened is seldom considered, and the effects on dependent species of moving threatened hosts are unclear. There is no published guidance on how to decide whether to move species, given this uncertainty. We examined the dependent-host system of 4 disparate taxonomic groups: insects on the feather-leaf banksia (Banksia brownii), montane banksia (B. montana), and Stirling Range beard heath (Leucopogon gnaphalioides..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council (Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions)


Awarded by Australia & Pacific Science Foundation (APSF)


Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

We thank the following colleagues for their time and the information they generously shared: S. Barrett, A. Cree, J. Ewen, N. Nelson, P. Seddon, C. Smuts-Kennedy, and D. van Winkel. Grants from the Australian Research Council (Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, and grant (DP0772057), Australia & Pacific Science Foundation (APSF 07/3), University of Melbourne Botany Foundation, and New South Wales National Parks & Wildlife Service supported this work. We are grateful to insightful comments made by R. Dunn, J. Hellmann, E. Fleishman, and 2 anonymous reviewers.