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Using Conditioned Food Aversion (CFA) to reduce Pied Crow (Corbus albus) predation of plover nests

Nest predation is one of the principle constraints on bird breeding success, accounting for 20 to 80% of all nest failures. It can be exacerbated by anthropogenic factors and the resultant increased predation pressure has caused the decline of numerous bird species worldwide. Identifying management...

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Main Author: Ferguson, Angela
Other Authors: Flower, Thomas
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Ferguson, Angela
author2 Flower, Thomas
author_browse Ferguson, Angela
Flower, Thomas
author_facet Flower, Thomas
Ferguson, Angela
author_sort Ferguson, Angela
collection Thesis
description Nest predation is one of the principle constraints on bird breeding success, accounting for 20 to 80% of all nest failures. It can be exacerbated by anthropogenic factors and the resultant increased predation pressure has caused the decline of numerous bird species worldwide. Identifying management strategies to reduce nest predation is consequently a priority for biodiversity conservation. Many lethal and non-lethal methods of predator control can be ineffective, unethical, time-consuming and expensive to implement. An alternative is the use of Conditioned Food Aversion (CFA), a method by which animals are deliberately induced to avoid nests following consumption of eggs treated with an illness-inducing toxin. Previous studies suggest that this technique is effective but many have been subject to several methodological flaws that limit their applicability. Here I employ an improved experimental design that uses both spatial and temporal controls and incorporates quantification of predator identity and abundance. By so doing the resultant effects can be attributed to CFA treatment with higher certainty. In the Berg River Estuary, South Africa, nest losses of the Kittlitz's Plover (Charadrius pecuarius) are high due to Pied Crow (Corvus albus) nest predation. I used this common plover as a model species to test whether CFA can be used as a conservation management tool to reduce nest predation. I used a field experiment to assess whether provisioning quail eggs treated with carbachol, an illness-inducing chemical, resulted in reduced nest predation. To assess the effects of treatment, nest survival data for both artificial plover nests containing quail eggs and natural Kittlitz's plover nests, as well as predator abundance were compared across three experimental phases (pre-treatment, treatment and post-treatment) and according to treatment type (carbachol versus water).
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:42.829Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology
publisherStr Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/20781 Using Conditioned Food Aversion (CFA) to reduce Pied Crow (Corbus albus) predation of plover nests Ferguson, Angela Flower, Thomas Thomson, Robert Conservation Biology Ornithology Nest predation is one of the principle constraints on bird breeding success, accounting for 20 to 80% of all nest failures. It can be exacerbated by anthropogenic factors and the resultant increased predation pressure has caused the decline of numerous bird species worldwide. Identifying management strategies to reduce nest predation is consequently a priority for biodiversity conservation. Many lethal and non-lethal methods of predator control can be ineffective, unethical, time-consuming and expensive to implement. An alternative is the use of Conditioned Food Aversion (CFA), a method by which animals are deliberately induced to avoid nests following consumption of eggs treated with an illness-inducing toxin. Previous studies suggest that this technique is effective but many have been subject to several methodological flaws that limit their applicability. Here I employ an improved experimental design that uses both spatial and temporal controls and incorporates quantification of predator identity and abundance. By so doing the resultant effects can be attributed to CFA treatment with higher certainty. In the Berg River Estuary, South Africa, nest losses of the Kittlitz's Plover (Charadrius pecuarius) are high due to Pied Crow (Corvus albus) nest predation. I used this common plover as a model species to test whether CFA can be used as a conservation management tool to reduce nest predation. I used a field experiment to assess whether provisioning quail eggs treated with carbachol, an illness-inducing chemical, resulted in reduced nest predation. To assess the effects of treatment, nest survival data for both artificial plover nests containing quail eggs and natural Kittlitz's plover nests, as well as predator abundance were compared across three experimental phases (pre-treatment, treatment and post-treatment) and according to treatment type (carbachol versus water). 2016-07-26T12:18:03Z 2016-07-26T12:18:03Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20781 eng application/pdf Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Conservation Biology
Ornithology
Ferguson, Angela
Using Conditioned Food Aversion (CFA) to reduce Pied Crow (Corbus albus) predation of plover nests
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Using Conditioned Food Aversion (CFA) to reduce Pied Crow (Corbus albus) predation of plover nests
title_full Using Conditioned Food Aversion (CFA) to reduce Pied Crow (Corbus albus) predation of plover nests
title_fullStr Using Conditioned Food Aversion (CFA) to reduce Pied Crow (Corbus albus) predation of plover nests
title_full_unstemmed Using Conditioned Food Aversion (CFA) to reduce Pied Crow (Corbus albus) predation of plover nests
title_short Using Conditioned Food Aversion (CFA) to reduce Pied Crow (Corbus albus) predation of plover nests
title_sort using conditioned food aversion cfa to reduce pied crow corbus albus predation of plover nests
topic Conservation Biology
Ornithology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20781
work_keys_str_mv AT fergusonangela usingconditionedfoodaversioncfatoreducepiedcrowcorbusalbuspredationofplovernests