Supplementary feeding is often a knee-jerk reaction to population declines, and its application is not critically evaluated, leading to polarized views among managers on its usefulness. Here, we advocate a more strategic approach to supplementary feeding so that the choice to use it is clearly justified over, or in combination with, other management actions and the predicted consequences are then critically assessed following implementation. We propose combining methods from a set of specialist disciplines that will allow critical evaluation of the need, benefit, and risks of food supplementation. Through the use of nutritional ecology, population ecology, and structured decision making, conservation managers can make better choices about what and how to feed by estimating consequences on population recovery across a range of possible actions. This structured approach also informs targeted monitoring and more clearly allows supplementary feeding to be integrated in recovery plans and reduces the risk of inefficient decisions. In New Zealand, managers of the endangered Hihi (Notiomystis cincta) often rely on supplementary feeding to support reintroduced populations. On Kapiti island the reintroduced Hihi population has responded well to food supplementation, but the logistics of providing an increasing demand recently outstretched management capacity. To decide whether and how the feeding regime should be revised, managers used a structured decision making approach informed by population responses to alternative feeding regimes. The decision was made to reduce the spatial distribution of feeders and invest saved time in increasing volume of food delivered into a smaller core area. The approach used allowed a transparent and defendable management decision in regard to supplementary feeding, reflecting the multiple objectives of managers and their priorities.

Improving supplementary feeding in species conservation / J.G. Ewen, L. Walker, S. Canessa, J.J. Groombridge. - In: CONSERVATION BIOLOGY. - ISSN 0888-8892. - 29:2(2015 Apr), pp. 341-349. [10.1111/cobi.12410]

Improving supplementary feeding in species conservation

S. Canessa
Penultimo
;
2015

Abstract

Supplementary feeding is often a knee-jerk reaction to population declines, and its application is not critically evaluated, leading to polarized views among managers on its usefulness. Here, we advocate a more strategic approach to supplementary feeding so that the choice to use it is clearly justified over, or in combination with, other management actions and the predicted consequences are then critically assessed following implementation. We propose combining methods from a set of specialist disciplines that will allow critical evaluation of the need, benefit, and risks of food supplementation. Through the use of nutritional ecology, population ecology, and structured decision making, conservation managers can make better choices about what and how to feed by estimating consequences on population recovery across a range of possible actions. This structured approach also informs targeted monitoring and more clearly allows supplementary feeding to be integrated in recovery plans and reduces the risk of inefficient decisions. In New Zealand, managers of the endangered Hihi (Notiomystis cincta) often rely on supplementary feeding to support reintroduced populations. On Kapiti island the reintroduced Hihi population has responded well to food supplementation, but the logistics of providing an increasing demand recently outstretched management capacity. To decide whether and how the feeding regime should be revised, managers used a structured decision making approach informed by population responses to alternative feeding regimes. The decision was made to reduce the spatial distribution of feeders and invest saved time in increasing volume of food delivered into a smaller core area. The approach used allowed a transparent and defendable management decision in regard to supplementary feeding, reflecting the multiple objectives of managers and their priorities.
English
Decision making; Nutritional ecology; Population ecology; Population recovery; Supportive management;
Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
apr-2015
29-ott-2014
Wiley Blackwell Publishing
29
2
341
349
9
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
orcid
crossref
datacite
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Improving supplementary feeding in species conservation / J.G. Ewen, L. Walker, S. Canessa, J.J. Groombridge. - In: CONSERVATION BIOLOGY. - ISSN 0888-8892. - 29:2(2015 Apr), pp. 341-349. [10.1111/cobi.12410]
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J.G. Ewen, L. Walker, S. Canessa, J.J. Groombridge
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1040212
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