ECOLOGY OF SHIP RATS (RATTUS-RATTUS) IN A KAURI (AGATHIS-AUSTRALIS) FOREST IN NORTHLAND, NEW-ZEALAND

Citation
Je. Dowding et Ec. Murphy, ECOLOGY OF SHIP RATS (RATTUS-RATTUS) IN A KAURI (AGATHIS-AUSTRALIS) FOREST IN NORTHLAND, NEW-ZEALAND, New Zealand journal of ecology, 18(1), 1994, pp. 19-28
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
ISSN journal
01106465
Volume
18
Issue
1
Year of publication
1994
Pages
19 - 28
Database
ISI
SICI code
0110-6465(1994)18:1<19:EOSR(I>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
Home range dimensions and habitat use by ship rats (Rattus rattus) at Puketi, a kauri (Agathis australis) forest in Northland, were examined by live capture and radio-tracking over five weeks in September and O ctober 1993. Home ranges of six females and five males averaged 0.86 h a in area and 174 m in length, with no significant difference in range area or length between males and females. There was substantial overl ap in ranges between and within sexes. One adult male increased the si ze of his range more than four-fold in seven nights in late October, c oinciding with the beginning of the breeding season. Some rats changed daytime den sites frequently and others used the same den for a numbe r of consecutive days; rats were found sharing dens on many occasions. Most rats returned to previously-used dens after denning elsewhere. A t night, rats spent most of their time active on or close to the groun d. There are a number of important differences between our findings an d those from other studies of ship rats in New Zealand; we suggest tha t the different times of year at which the studies were carried out ar e responsible for some of these differences. Our results, with those o f others, suggest that in winter rats of both sexes have 0.5-1.0 ha ra nges, but that during the breeding season ranges of males increase whi le those of females stay similar in size. Trapping indices showed that ship rats were not evenly distributed in Puketi Forest. In December 1 993, an aerial poison operation to control brushtail possums (Trichosu rus vulpecula) was carried out over the study area, at which time five rats (three male, two female) still carried functioning radio-transmi tters. The three males died within four hours on the night following t he operation but the two females were alive three days later.