June 20, 2024

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Scotland's capercaillie population offered extinction lifeline

Illustration of experimental design. Credit: Journal of Applied Ecology (2024). DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.14693
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Illustration of experimental design. Credit: Journal of Applied Ecology (2024). DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.14693

Researchers might have solved the riddle of how to save one of Scotland's most iconic protected species from eating another.

The capercaillie is a ground-nesting bird that, with just over 500 left in the wild, is in danger of extinction in the UK. One contributor to its decline is the eating of eggs and chicks by predators including another protected species, the .

Now a trial in the Cairngorms which involved placing artificial nests filled with chicken's eggs and leaving deer meat in strategic locations to feed hungry predators and discourage them from further foraging during the , has seen an increase of 83% in nest survival.

The research, newly published in the Journal of Applied Ecology, shows this sort of diversionary feeding could be a significant contributor to saving the capercaillie from extinction. As a result of the study, it is already being rolled out by Forestry and Land Scotland (FLS), the RSPB Scotland and other partners in Deeside.

Ph.D. researcher Jack Bamber from the University of Aberdeen's School of Biological Sciences led the study, supervised by ecologists from the universities of Aberdeen and St Andrews, alongside FLS.

Part of the Cairngorms Connect Predator Project, the research was conducted across 60sqkm of land managed by the Cairngorms Connect Partnership.

"A major obstacle in effective conservation management is the conflict between recovering predators eating endangered prey. This challenge is becoming commonplace in the era of ecosystem restoration. In Scotland the much-celebrated recovery of the pine marten, a nest predator, and the conservation of one of its potential prey, the capercaillie, epitomizes this issue," said Jack.

"Some often advocate for lethal predator control, which isn't desirable for , so alternative conservation interventions are needed. Diversionary feeding, a non-lethal intervention strategy, is a potential solution to this conflict but direct evidence that it leads to significant reductions in nest depredation pressure was lacking.

"Our idea was to fill the bellies of pine martens and other predators, like badgers, in capercaillie strongholds, predicting that once full of free food they would no longer search for eggs."

Working in partnership with land managers in the Cairngorms National Park, the team placed 720 filled with chicken eggs in historic capercaillie habitat. Half of them had diversionary feeding stations with deer carrion set up nearby and the survival of the nests were monitored over an eight week period.

"It is the first time this method has been trialed directly to alleviate ground nest predation and the results showed that diversionary feeding, deployed specifically during the breeding season, increased the chance of a nest surviving by 83% compared to the nests without carrion available," added Jack.

More information: Jack A. Bamber et al, Evaluating diversionary feeding as a method to resolve conservation conflicts in a recovering ecosystem, Journal of Applied Ecology (2024). DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.14693

Journal information: Journal of Applied Ecology

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