Occupancy Abundance Potential Distribution And Spatial Competition Of The Critically Endangered European Mink Mustela Lutreola And The Invasive Non Native American Mink Neovison Vison In The Iberian Peninsula PDF Download

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Occupancy, Abundance, Potential Distribution and Spatial Competition of the Critically Endangered European Mink (Mustela Lutreola) and the Invasive Non-native American Mink (neovison Vison) in the Iberian Peninsula

Occupancy, Abundance, Potential Distribution and Spatial Competition of the Critically Endangered European Mink (Mustela Lutreola) and the Invasive Non-native American Mink (neovison Vison) in the Iberian Peninsula
Author: Giulia Santulli Sanzo
Publisher:
Total Pages: 261
Release: 2014
Genre:
ISBN:

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Occupancy, Abundance, Potential Dislribution and Spatial Competitíon of the Critically Endangered European Mink (Mustela Lutreola) and the Invasive Non-native American Mink (Neovison Vison) in the Lberian Peninsula

Occupancy, Abundance, Potential Dislribution and Spatial Competitíon of the Critically Endangered European Mink (Mustela Lutreola) and the Invasive Non-native American Mink (Neovison Vison) in the Lberian Peninsula
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN:

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The target species of this thesis, the European mink (Mustela lutreola) and the American mink (Neovison vison), are considered respectively as one of the most threatened carnivores and as one of the worst invaders in Europe. Both species colonized the Iberian Peninsula very recently: the European mink entered from France in the 1950s and colonized the rivers basins of the Northeastern Spain, and the American mink was introduced in the 1950s through fur farming and is currently found in six different populations throughout the Northern half of the Peninsula. In the Iberian Peninsula, most analyses focused on conservation and management of the European and the American mink in the last two decades are at local-scale, using data collected over small areas inside their range of distribution. In this thesis, we explored the two mink species interaction, occupancy, abundance and potential distribution over their entire range of distribution in the Iberian Peninsula, in order to provide sound basis to guide conservation and management actions. We used data from live-trapping surveys conducted between 2000 and 2011 as part of the European mink conservation plan and the American mink control plan. Moreover, we collected presence data of the historical distribution of the European mink all over Europe and presence data of the American mink in the native (North America) and the invaded (Europe) ranges. We applied three different statistical techniques to analyze the data: Occupancy Models, N-mixture Models and Species Distribution Models. We provided evidences of a large-scale competitive exclusion of the native species by the invasive mink, and we found a negative trend in the abundance of the critically endangered mink over the last fifteen years. We produced a spatial prediction of the potential expansion of the American mink in the Iberian Peninsula, demonstrating that the species could colonize river basins of the entire Peninsula. Finally, we analyzed the overlap of the two mink species' potential distribution in the Iberian Peninsula, in order to identify priority conservation areas for the European mink. Overall, from our analysis emerged that a better coordination between local policies as well as a greater constancy in monitoring and controlling the American mink population is imperative to improve the conservation strategy of the European mink in Spain.


European Mink, Mustela Lutreola

European Mink, Mustela Lutreola
Author: David Whyte Macdonald
Publisher:
Total Pages: 138
Release: 2002
Genre: European mink
ISBN:

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Wild Mink (Mustela Lutreola) in Europe

Wild Mink (Mustela Lutreola) in Europe
Author: Marie-Charlotte Saint Girons
Publisher: Council of Europe
Total Pages: 48
Release: 1991-01-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9789287119865

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Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Naturak Habitats


The Mink and the Water Vole

The Mink and the Water Vole
Author: David Whyte Macdonald
Publisher:
Total Pages: 178
Release: 1999
Genre: American mink
ISBN:

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Habitat Selection and Occupancy Patterns of American Mink (Neovison Vison) During Winter in North-central British Columbia, Canada

Habitat Selection and Occupancy Patterns of American Mink (Neovison Vison) During Winter in North-central British Columbia, Canada
Author: Dexter P. Hodder
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2016
Genre:
ISBN:

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The spatial distributions of animals generally are affected by the availability of food, competition, predators, mates, and the need to communicate with conspecifics. Behavioural, physiological and morphological adaptations to these selecting agents have allowed members of the Order Carnivora (C. Mammalia) to occupy a wide range of environments, but at the same time, each combination of characteristics places constraints on the habitat a particular species is able to occupy. For example, many members of the Family Mustelidae are vulnerable to extreme temperatures as a result of their tubular body shape. The American mink (Neovison vison) likely faces these temperature constraints, being a smaller-bodied mustelid that ranges over a large portion of North America. Despite its large range, and its historical importance to the fur industry, the species has remained largely understudied in its native habitat. During 2011-2012, I conducted winter telemetry on 7 adult mink and used resource selection function models to assess habitat selection patterns while considering spatial scale and gender. I found that at a larger scale, the animals' use of habitat was strongly linked to riparian features, whereas this effect was less noticeable at a fine scale. The larger males selected more lakeshore habitat, whereas the smaller females generally were near streams in more forested areas. I suggest this spatial separation could be linked to an inability of females to forage aquatically in winter as a result of their smaller body size. This may make females more sensitive to competition from other forest carnivores as well as impacts from resource development activities. During winter 2013, I surveyed for mink using remote cameras (n=37) deployed in riparian habitat, including lakeshore/stream confluences. I found that fish-bearing streams positively affected mink occupancy, while the amount of older (>40yrs) coniferous forests had a negative relationship with mink occupancy. I postulate that while mink seem to occur at high densities in altered ecosystems and in areas where they are invasive, in their native range these animals are limited by environmental constraints (low winter temperatures) and competitive pressures in the system. Future work on mink and other carnivores should explore interspecific interactions in addition to habitat selection in order to develop more robust monitoring and management practices.


The Mink

The Mink
Author: Nigel Dunstone
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 278
Release: 1993
Genre: Nature
ISBN:

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Body size, and interactions between European and American mink (Mustela lutreola and M-vison) in Eastern Europe

Body size, and interactions between European and American mink (Mustela lutreola and M-vison) in Eastern Europe
Author: V. Sidorovich
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1999
Genre:
ISBN:

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Body sizes of European mink (Mustela lutreola L.), polecat (M. Putorius L.) and American mink (M. Vison Schreber) were studied over a 10-year period in an area of north-eastern Belarus, before and after the invasion by American mink, and data are presented on interspecific interactions. On arrival in the study area American mink males were larger than males of European mink and polecat, and American mink females were larger than females of the other species. After arrival of the American mink its mean body size decreased, whilst the resident male and female European mink and female polecat increased as measured in absolute mass, length and relative mass. The observations suggest a strong character convergence most plausibly explained as a response to the invading exotic by the residents as well as in the invading species itself, whilst a divergence had been expected. There was no evidence to show whether these differences were genetically based. The body size data are consistent with the hypothesis that European mink, and to a lesser extent polecat, are responding to direct aggression from American mink (rather than merely competing for resources), with the smaller individual European mink being more likely to disappear first. We provide direct evidence for the aggressive nature of inter-specific relations from observations using radio-tracking: all observed inter-specific interactions were aggressive, significantly more so than intraspecific encounters, causing the European mink to flee, and several left the study area altogether. Implications for niche theory and for conservation management are discussed.