| Literature DB >> 28526824 |
Catherine E Grueber1,2, Elizabeth E Reid-Wainscoat3,4, Samantha Fox4, Katherine Belov5, Debra M Shier3,6, Carolyn J Hogg5,7, David Pemberton4.
Abstract
Captive breeding of threatened species, for release to the wild, is critical for conservation. This strategy, however, risks producing captive-raised animals with traits poorly suited to the wild. We describe the first study to characterise accumulated consequences of long-term captive breeding on behaviour, by following the release of Tasmanian devils to the wild. We test the impact of prolonged captive breeding on the probability that captive-raised animals are fatally struck by vehicles. Multiple generations of captive breeding increased the probability that individuals were fatally struck, a pattern that could not be explained by other confounding factors (e.g. age or release site). Our results imply that long-term captive breeding programs may produce animals that are naïve to the risks of the post-release environment. Our analyses have already induced changes in management policy of this endangered species, and serve as model of productive synergy between ecological monitoring and conservation strategy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28526824 PMCID: PMC5438407 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-02273-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Map of release sites (dots), with roads as marked (highways thick lines, secondary roads thin lines). Figure generated using Manifold System v 8 enterprise edition (www.manifold.net).
Figure 2Timeline of devil road strike reports in the 12 weeks of intensive monitoring following each release (Narawntapu National Park release on 25th September 2015; Forestier Peninsula 1 release on 18th November 2015; Forestier Peninsula 2 release on 25th February 2016). Darker intensity of shading for arrows indicates multiple overlaid points.
Final model (after model averaging; top model set provided at Supplementary Table S3) standardised effects of each predictor on the probability of fatal vehicle strike (N = 50).
| Predictor* | Effect size | Adjusted SE | 95% CI | RI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| β0 | −0.581 | 0.334 | −1.236; 0.074 | |
| G | 2.108 | 0.879 | 0.385; 3.831 | 1.00 |
| A | 1.145 | 0.864 | −0.549; 2.839 | 0.41 |
| S | 0.687 | 0.694 | −0.674; 2.047 | 0.30 |
| Site(NNP) | 0.635 | 0.901 | −1.131; 2.4 | 0.13 |
*β0 = model intercept; A = age; S = sex; G = generations in captivity; Site = release site, FP was the reference category.
Figure 3Relationship between generations in captivity and probability that captive Tasmanian devils are struck by vehicles on roads following release. Points indicate observed data, where darker shading indicates multiple overlaid points. The solid line is the fitted relationship, conditional on the mean of other parameters in the model (Table 1); dashed lines are the 95% confidence interval evaluated by parametric bootstrapping.