Habitat loss and raptor predation: disentangling long– and short–term causes of red grouse declines
Open Access
- 7 April 2000
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 267 (1444) , 651-656
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2000.1051
Abstract
The number of red grouse (Lagopus lagopus scoticus) shot in the UK has declined by 50% during the 20th century. This decline has coincided with reductions in the area of suitable habitat and recoveries in the populations of some avian predators. Here we use long–term records of shooting bags and a large–scale manipulation of raptor density to disentangle the effects of habitat loss and raptor predation on grouse populations. The numbers of grouse harvested on the Eskdale half of Langholm Moor in southern Scotland declined significantly during 1913–1990 and grouse bags from the whole moor from 1950 to 1990 exhibited an almost identical but non–significant trend. Hen harriers (Circus cyaneus) and peregrine falcons (Falco peregrinus) were absent or bred at low densities on this moor throughout this period but heather–dominant vegetation declined by 48% between 1948 and 1988. Harrier and peregrine breeding numbers on Langholm Moor increased to high levels following protection in 1990 whilst grouse density and grouse bags declined year after year until shooting was abandoned in 1998. The prediction of a peak in grouse bags on Langholm Moor in 1996 based on the patterns of bags during 1950–1990 was supported by the observed peaks in 1997 on two nearby moors with few raptors which formerly cycled in synchrony with Langholm Moor. This study demonstrates that, whilst long–term declines in grouse bags were most probably due to habitat loss, high levels of raptor predation subsequently limited the grouse population and suppressed a cycle. This study thus offers support to theoretical models which predict that generalist predators may suppress cycles in prey populations.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Numerical and functional responses in generalist predators: hen harriers and peregrines on Scottish grouse moorsJournal of Animal Ecology, 1999
- Abundances of red fox and pine marten in relation to the composition of boreal forest landscapesJournal of Animal Ecology, 1998
- An Empirically Based Model for Latitudinal Gradient in Vole Population DynamicsThe American Naturalist, 1997
- Microtine Rodent Dynamics in Northern Europe: Parameterized Models for the Predator‐Prey InteractionEcology, 1995
- The PeregrineFalco peregrinusbreeding population of the United Kingdom in 1991Bird Study, 1995
- Population sizes and habitat associations of upland breeding birds in the south Pennines, EnglandBiological Conservation, 1994
- Status of the Hen HarrierCircus cyaneusin Scotland in 1988–89Bird Study, 1993
- Corvid Density and Nest Predation in Relation to Forest Fragmentation: A Landscape PerspectiveEcology, 1992
- Do Breeding Nomadic Avian Predators Dampen Population Fluctuations of Small Mammals?Oikos, 1991
- Predation of Tengmalm's Owls: Numerical Responses, Functional Responses and Dampening Impact on Population Fluctuations of MicrotinesOikos, 1989