Please consider signing this petition to ask  the Madeira Regional
Government not to supplement the population of European Rabbits on Porto
Santo Island (Madeira archipelago). The rabbit population has crashed and
this may allow time for recovery of the island. Rabbits are regarded as one
of the worst invasive species on islands. Please read below for further
details.

Thank you,

David Duffy


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Shyama Pagad <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Feb 8, 2017 at 11:21 AM
Subject: Re: [Aliens-L] Massive die out of European rabbits in Porto Santo
Island: hunting disaster or conservation opportunity?
To: aliens-l Mailing List <[email protected]>


Petition  with regard to Rabbits in Porto Santo Island

https://www.ipetitions.com/petition/rabbits-in-porto-santo

Saludos,

-- 
Juan Luis Rodríguez Luengo
Servicio de Biodiversidad
Gobierno de Canarias
Edificio de Usos Múltiples I
Avenida de Anaga, 35
38170 Santa Cruz de Tenerife
Tfno.: 922 922 327

*Massive die out of European rabbits in Porto Santo Island: hunting
disaster or conservation opportunity?*

In response to the ongoing global biodiversity crisis more than 20 billion
euros are annually spend in biodiversity conservation.

Islands harbour a disproportionate number of the planet’s terrestrial
species (~15%) in a small fraction of the planet’s terrestrial land area
(~5.5%). They host some of the most vulnerable habitats and their
biodiversity has been majorly affected by both historical and present-day
anthropogenic threats such as invasive species, climate change and
pollution. As a result, two-thirds of the recent extinctions were of
insular species and more than one third of the currently critically
endangered species are island-dwellers.

The European rabbit (*Oryctolagus cuniculus*) is globally considered among
the 100 most invasive species. Introduced to more than 800 islands
worldwide, they are, together with goats, the herbivores responsible for
most of the damage to invaded insular ecosystems affecting the abundance
and composition of native fauna and floras via direct (e.g. herbivory and
nest disturbance) and indirect pathways (e.g. competition for food and
hyperpredation). The most important impact of rabbits is overgrazing, which
has consequences for all trophic levels.



Overgrazing is arguably the most serious threat posed by European rabbits
outside their native range and, in island ecosystems, grazing effects are
amplified by the lack of adaptations to herbivory of most native insular
plants, which under intensive herbivory pressure from introduced rabbits
are out-competed by non-native species that have co-evolved with
lagomorphs. Overgrazing by rabbits is also reported, for example, to have
indirectly contributed to the extinction of some species of birds.

It is thus unquestionable that introduced herbivores have a severe effect
on the native vegetation on islands, critically endangering the native
endemic species and an increasing body of evidence now supports that across
its non-native distribution, the European rabbit can constitute a serious
ecological, agricultural and public health problem. And this is
particularly evident on islands.

The small island of Porto Santo (43 km2) is the oldest island (~14 million
years) of the Archipelago of Madeira. The island shows an evident
environmental degradation due to historical overexploitation way over the
carrying capacity of its ecosystems. On the other hand, its importance for
biodiversity conservation is high, since it harbours more than 1500
species, including nearly 250 endemic taxa.

The rabbit introduction in this island became famous as historical reports
mention that a single female that had littered during the voyage was
introduced together with her offspring and multiplied so extensively that
within a few years settlers were forced to evade the island due to
widespread crop loss and consequent food shortage. In recent years, the
island rabbit population has crashed due to the combined impacts of the
*Myxoma *virus and the rabbit haemorrhagic disease. As a consequence, the
Madeira Regional Government, through the recently created Institute of
Forests and Nature Conservation (*Instituto das Florestas e Conservação da
Natureza (IFCN) - *http://ifcn.madeira.gov.pt/) now aims to boost the
island population with rabbits from the nearby Madeira Island. This
decision aligns with the interests of the archipelago’s hunting community,
to which the rabbit represents the main game species, however, it
represents a serious threat to the extant native biodiversity of the
island, in particular to its threatened flora.

Over the last century at least 10 native plant species went extinct
(e.g. *Frankenia
pulverulenta*, *Ephedra fragilis*, *Bolboschoenus maritimus*, *Schoenoplectus
triqueter*), 26 more taxa are currently seriously threatened (several
listed as Critically Endangered or Endangered on the IUCN Red List). As to
habitats, the Red List of Habitats of Europe, recently issued by the
European Commission, assigns to the habitat ‘F8.2. Madeiran xerophytic
scrub’ – by large dominant in Porto Santo – the threat status of
‘endangered’. New pressure on the remnant native vegetation, by increase of
rabbit population to historical excessive levels, will enhance the
probability of serious populational decrease, or even to extinction, of
critical endemic plant populations (e.g., *Pericallis menezesii*, *Vicia
ferreirensis*) and the collapse of native ecosystems. Also, changes in the
island’s vegetation are reflected in the endemic-rich invertebrate
communities of Porto Santo which are also in a dire condition. The status
of the island’s avian communities is mostly unknown. However, at least two
species endemic to the archipelago, *Rallus adolfocaesaris *and *Columba
trocaz* (the later still survives in the nearby island of Madeira), became
extinct since the arrival of the Portuguese.



Intense soil erosion, mostly due to lack of vegetation cover, has propelled
an extensive afforestation project partly financed by funds of the European
Union (EU). The Madeira Regional Government has also received considerable
EU funding through LIFE projects aimed specifically at eradicating invasive
mammals, including rabbits.

The planned reinforcement of the rabbit population in Porto Santo would go
against a century of afforestation efforts for avoiding soil erosion and
would send a mixed message in terms of nature conservation that could
possible compromise future EU funding.

Game hunting is a relevant social activity and its economic impacts on the
island economy cannot be discarded. However, no study has explicitly
weighted the *pros* (e.g. hunting benefits) and *cons* (e.g. soil erosion
and biodiversity damage) of the island’s rabbit population. Despite clear
parallels between the social component of hunting in mainland and island
ecosystems, the ecological specificities of the later implies that game
management in an insular setting has to follow different rules.



We argue that the rabbit population in Porto Santo brings more harm than
good and we advocate that the recent collapse of the island’s rabbit
populations offers a unique opportunity to recover the island’s vegetation
cover and associated biodiversity and to reduce soil erosion. The
opportunity costs of not doing so are too high and the long-term
consequences might reveal irreversible.

The rabbit population imperils the survival of island’s endemic species and
by doing so compromises the island potential as an ecotourism destination.

With this petition we intend to:

·       Alert the regional authorities to the serious problems that
European rabbits pose to the fragile island ecosystems such as Porto Santo;

·       Advocate for science-based management decisions regarding hunting
activities;

·       Advocate for a halt of the reinforcement of European rabbits in
Porto Santo;

·       Highlight that the current low numbers of rabbits represent a
unique opportunity to recover the extant biodiversity of Porto Santo and to
diminish current levels of soil erosion caused by the intense rabbit
herbivory.





----------------------------------------------------------------
Shyama Pagad


Program Officer

IUCN SSC Invasive Species Specialist Group

University of Auckland, New Zealand






-- 
David Duffy
戴大偉 (Dài Dàwěi)
Pacific Cooperative Studies Unit/Makamakaʻāinana
Botany
University of Hawaii/*Ke Kulanui o Hawaiʻi*
3190 Maile Way
Honolulu Hawaii 96822 USA
1-808-956-8218

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