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Impacts of Removing Badgers on Localised Counts of Hedgehogs.
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- Author(s): Trewby, Iain D.1 ; Young, Richard2; McDonald, Robbie A.3; Wilson, Gavin J.1; Davison, John4; Walker, Neil1; Robertson, Andrew3; Doncaster, C. Patrick5; Delahay, Richard J.1
- Source:
PLoS ONE. Apr2014, Vol. 9 Issue 4, p1-4. 4p.
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- Abstract:
Experimental evidence of the interactions among mammalian predators that eat or compete with one another is rare, due to the ethical and logistical challenges of managing wild populations in a controlled and replicated way. Here, we report on the opportunistic use of a replicated and controlled culling experiment (the Randomised Badger Culling Trial) to investigate the relationship between two sympatric predators: European badgers Meles meles and western European hedgehogs Erinaceus europaeus. In areas of preferred habitat (amenity grassland), counts of hedgehogs more than doubled over a 5-year period from the start of badger culling (from 0.9 ha−1 pre-cull to 2.4 ha−1 post-cull), whereas hedgehog counts did not change where there was no badger culling (0.3–0.3 hedgehogs ha−1). This trial provides experimental evidence for mesopredator release as an outcome of management of a top predator. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Abstract:
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