Litcius/Paper detail

Invader removal triggers competitive release in a threatened avian predator

J. David Wiens, Katie M. Dugger, J. Mark Higley, Damon B. Lesmeister, Alan B. Franklin, Keith A. Hamm, Gary C. White, Krista E. Dilione, David C. Simon, Robin Bown, Peter C. Carlson, Charles B. Yackulic, James D. Nichols, James E. Hines, Raymond J. Davis, David W. Lamphear, Christopher McCafferty, Trent L. McDonald, Stan G. Sovern

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences51 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

). Removal of barred owls had a strong, positive effect on survival of sympatric spotted owls and a weaker but positive effect on spotted owl dispersal and recruitment. After removals, the estimated mean annual rate of population change for spotted owls stabilized in areas with removals (0.2% decline per year), but continued to decline sharply in areas without removals (12.1% decline per year). The results demonstrated that the most substantial changes in population dynamics of northern spotted owls over the past two decades were associated with the invasion, population expansion, and subsequent removal of barred owls. Our study provides experimental evidence of the demographic consequences of competitive release, where a threatened avian predator was freed from restrictions imposed on its population dynamics with the removal of a competitively dominant invasive species.

Topics & Concepts

Threatened speciesInterspecific competitionBiological dispersalEcologyPopulationBiologyPredationInvasive speciesPredatorApex predatorAbundance (ecology)Sympatric speciationCompetition (biology)HabitatDemographySociologyAnimal Ecology and Behavior StudiesWildlife Ecology and ConservationEcology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies