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Balancing conservation and welfare in ex situ management of the extinct in the wild sihek: sex‐ and age‐specific causes of mortality and contributions to population growth rate

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Balancing conservation and welfare in ex situ management of the extinct in the wild sihek: sex‐ and age‐specific causes of mortality and contributions to population growth rate. / Trask, A. E.; Carraro, C.; Kock, R. et al.
In: Animal Conservation, Vol. 27, No. 2, 30.04.2024, p. 171-183.

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Trask AE, Carraro C, Kock R, McCrea R, Newland S, Royer E et al. Balancing conservation and welfare in ex situ management of the extinct in the wild sihek: sex‐ and age‐specific causes of mortality and contributions to population growth rate. Animal Conservation. 2024 Apr 30;27(2):171-183. Epub 2023 Jul 30. doi: 10.1111/acv.12895

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@article{3e74c4591c0e4d1ab2eafd9c30c5c7e1,
title = "Balancing conservation and welfare in ex situ management of the extinct in the wild sihek: sex‐ and age‐specific causes of mortality and contributions to population growth rate",
abstract = "AbstractEx situ threatened species management has both conservation and welfare objectives and these objectives often align, but can diverge. Areas of agreement can present win‐wins for achieving welfare and conservation objectives, while identifying areas of divergence is important to ensure management strategies achieve balance across objectives. We examined welfare and conservation objectives in the ex situ population of Extinct in the Wild sihek (Guam kingfisher, Todiramphus cinnamominus) by quantifying mortality rates, determining sex‐ and age‐specific causes of mortality and identifying associated welfare domains, as well as quantifying sex‐ and age‐specific differences in reproductive value and contributions to variation in population growth rate (λ). Females had significantly higher mortality rates than males, potentially impacting population viability and suggesting females may be more vulnerable to experiencing lower welfare than males. Mitigating causes of female mortality would therefore present a clear win‐win for both welfare and conservation objectives. Both causes of mortality and contributions to variation in λ were found to differ across sex‐ and age‐classes. In particular, nutritional and metabolic diseases tended to impact younger age‐classes and these age‐classes had large contributions to variation in λ. Mitigation of these diseases could therefore also present a win‐win for welfare and conservation objectives. However, we also identified a potential divergence between objectives: a major cause of female mortality was reproductive disease with older aged females primarily affected, but older aged females contributed little to variation in λ and had low reproductive value. Developing mitigation strategies for reproductive disease could therefore aid welfare objectives but have little benefit for conservation objectives, suggesting careful balancing across objectives is required. Our results highlight the need to explicitly consider conservation and welfare objectives in threatened species management, in particular in the context of an increasing conservation need for ex situ population management, coupled with increasing social concern for animal welfare.",
keywords = "animal conservation, animal health, animal welfare, birth-flow population model, cause of death, conservation breeding programme, extinct in the wild",
author = "Trask, {A. E.} and C. Carraro and R. Kock and R. McCrea and S. Newland and E. Royer and S. Medina and D. Fontenot and Ewen, {J. G.}",
year = "2024",
month = apr,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1111/acv.12895",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "171--183",
journal = "Animal Conservation",
issn = "1367-9430",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Balancing conservation and welfare in ex situ management of the extinct in the wild sihek

T2 - sex‐ and age‐specific causes of mortality and contributions to population growth rate

AU - Trask, A. E.

AU - Carraro, C.

AU - Kock, R.

AU - McCrea, R.

AU - Newland, S.

AU - Royer, E.

AU - Medina, S.

AU - Fontenot, D.

AU - Ewen, J. G.

PY - 2024/4/30

Y1 - 2024/4/30

N2 - AbstractEx situ threatened species management has both conservation and welfare objectives and these objectives often align, but can diverge. Areas of agreement can present win‐wins for achieving welfare and conservation objectives, while identifying areas of divergence is important to ensure management strategies achieve balance across objectives. We examined welfare and conservation objectives in the ex situ population of Extinct in the Wild sihek (Guam kingfisher, Todiramphus cinnamominus) by quantifying mortality rates, determining sex‐ and age‐specific causes of mortality and identifying associated welfare domains, as well as quantifying sex‐ and age‐specific differences in reproductive value and contributions to variation in population growth rate (λ). Females had significantly higher mortality rates than males, potentially impacting population viability and suggesting females may be more vulnerable to experiencing lower welfare than males. Mitigating causes of female mortality would therefore present a clear win‐win for both welfare and conservation objectives. Both causes of mortality and contributions to variation in λ were found to differ across sex‐ and age‐classes. In particular, nutritional and metabolic diseases tended to impact younger age‐classes and these age‐classes had large contributions to variation in λ. Mitigation of these diseases could therefore also present a win‐win for welfare and conservation objectives. However, we also identified a potential divergence between objectives: a major cause of female mortality was reproductive disease with older aged females primarily affected, but older aged females contributed little to variation in λ and had low reproductive value. Developing mitigation strategies for reproductive disease could therefore aid welfare objectives but have little benefit for conservation objectives, suggesting careful balancing across objectives is required. Our results highlight the need to explicitly consider conservation and welfare objectives in threatened species management, in particular in the context of an increasing conservation need for ex situ population management, coupled with increasing social concern for animal welfare.

AB - AbstractEx situ threatened species management has both conservation and welfare objectives and these objectives often align, but can diverge. Areas of agreement can present win‐wins for achieving welfare and conservation objectives, while identifying areas of divergence is important to ensure management strategies achieve balance across objectives. We examined welfare and conservation objectives in the ex situ population of Extinct in the Wild sihek (Guam kingfisher, Todiramphus cinnamominus) by quantifying mortality rates, determining sex‐ and age‐specific causes of mortality and identifying associated welfare domains, as well as quantifying sex‐ and age‐specific differences in reproductive value and contributions to variation in population growth rate (λ). Females had significantly higher mortality rates than males, potentially impacting population viability and suggesting females may be more vulnerable to experiencing lower welfare than males. Mitigating causes of female mortality would therefore present a clear win‐win for both welfare and conservation objectives. Both causes of mortality and contributions to variation in λ were found to differ across sex‐ and age‐classes. In particular, nutritional and metabolic diseases tended to impact younger age‐classes and these age‐classes had large contributions to variation in λ. Mitigation of these diseases could therefore also present a win‐win for welfare and conservation objectives. However, we also identified a potential divergence between objectives: a major cause of female mortality was reproductive disease with older aged females primarily affected, but older aged females contributed little to variation in λ and had low reproductive value. Developing mitigation strategies for reproductive disease could therefore aid welfare objectives but have little benefit for conservation objectives, suggesting careful balancing across objectives is required. Our results highlight the need to explicitly consider conservation and welfare objectives in threatened species management, in particular in the context of an increasing conservation need for ex situ population management, coupled with increasing social concern for animal welfare.

KW - animal conservation

KW - animal health

KW - animal welfare

KW - birth-flow population model

KW - cause of death

KW - conservation breeding programme

KW - extinct in the wild

U2 - 10.1111/acv.12895

DO - 10.1111/acv.12895

M3 - Journal article

VL - 27

SP - 171

EP - 183

JO - Animal Conservation

JF - Animal Conservation

SN - 1367-9430

IS - 2

ER -