Native to Nemesis: a cultural and environmental history of the Noisy Miner 1788 - 2019

Q2 Agricultural and Biological Sciences Australian Zoologist Pub Date : 2022-03-16 DOI:10.7882/az.2022.009
R. Beggs
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Abstract

1878: “…gallant little birds” (Wagga Wagga Advertiser) 1915: “… the carol of the magpie is eclipsed by the song of the miner” (Emu) 2004: “…the mafia of the bird world” (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) 2015: “I hate those f***in things” (RedditAustralia) Through the 19th Century and the first half of the 20th Century, notwithstanding its role as an agricultural pest, the Noisy Miner Manorina melanocephala was considered with affection by colonial society. The species’ reputation has been severely damaged in recent decades, however, on account of its violent tendencies towards smaller woodland birds, including many of conservation concern. Aggressive exclusion of small woodland birds from potential woodland habitat by Noisy Miners was declared a Key Threatening Process under federal conservation legislation in 2014. Given that Noisy Miners, other woodland birds, and the post-ice age woodland environment have been co-evolving for at least 10 000 years, how did the natural competitive behaviour of Noisy Miners become an ecological problem? In this paper I review historical references to Noisy Miners and current research on the ecology of the species to construct a trajectory of change. Culturally, these changes include a shift in attitudes to the species from agricultural pest and popular native bird to a vilified, “overabundant” native species and nemesis of small woodland birds. Ecologically, changes have included an expansion in distribution and abundance of Noisy Miners. This has led to an increase in scale of the effects of Noisy Miner aggression on small woodland birds. The historical record contains many references to Noisy Miner aggression against other species, the first appearing within four years of the arrival of the First Fleet in 1788. Evidence that such aggression could affect the abundance and distribution of small woodland birds, however, appears only in the period after World War II. The changing ecological role of Noisy Miners, and the associated changes in cultural attitude to the species, appear linked to the loss, fragmentation and degradation of native woodland in eastern Australia since the introduction of European agriculture and urbanization. In particular, the change in ecological role of the Noisy Miner appears to be linked to the accelerated rates of deforestation in the post-war period. Such broadscale habitat modification has both benefitted Noisy Miners and exacerbated declines in woodland-dependent small birds.
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原产克星:1788 - 2019年嘈杂矿工的文化和环境历史
1878年:“……勇敢的小鸟”(Wagga-Wagga Advertiser)1915年:“喜鹊的颂歌被矿工的歌声所掩盖”(Emu)2004年:“..鸟类世界的黑手党”(澳大利亚广播公司)2015年:“我讨厌事物中的那些f***”(RedditAustralia)贯穿19世纪和20世纪上半叶,尽管它是一种农业害虫,黑色素沉着的矿工Manorina黑色素沉着症受到殖民社会的爱戴。然而,近几十年来,由于该物种对较小林地鸟类的暴力倾向,包括许多保护问题,其声誉受到了严重损害。2014年,根据联邦保护立法,Noisy Miners将小型林地鸟类积极排除在潜在的林地栖息地之外被宣布为关键威胁程序。考虑到噪音矿工、其他林地鸟类和后冰河时代的林地环境已经共同进化了至少10000年,噪音矿工的自然竞争行为是如何成为一个生态问题的?在这篇论文中,我回顾了对Noisy Miners的历史参考和目前对该物种生态学的研究,以构建一个变化的轨迹。从文化上讲,这些变化包括人们对该物种的态度从农业害虫和受欢迎的本土鸟类转变为被诋毁、“数量过多”的本土物种和小型林地鸟类的克星。从生态学上讲,变化包括噪音矿工的分布和丰度的扩大。这导致噪音矿工攻击小型林地鸟类的影响规模增加。历史记录中有许多关于Noisy Miner对其他物种的侵略,第一次出现在1788年第一舰队抵达后的四年内。然而,只有在第二次世界大战后,才有证据表明这种侵略可能影响小型林地鸟类的数量和分布。自欧洲农业和城市化引入以来,Noisy Miners不断变化的生态角色,以及对该物种文化态度的相关变化,似乎与澳大利亚东部原生林地的丧失、破碎和退化有关。特别是,喧闹矿工生态作用的变化似乎与战后森林砍伐速度的加快有关。这种大规模的栖息地改造既让喧闹的矿工受益,也加剧了依赖林地的小鸟数量的减少。
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来源期刊
Australian Zoologist
Australian Zoologist Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Animal Science and Zoology
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
43
期刊介绍: The Royal Zoological Society publishes a fully refereed scientific journal, Australian Zoologist, specialising in topics relevant to Australian zoology. The Australian Zoologist was first published by the Society in 1914, making it the oldest Australian journal specialising in zoological topics. The scope of the journal has increased substantially in the last 20 years, and it now attracts papers on a wide variety of zoological, ecological and environmentally related topics. The RZS also publishes, as books, and the outcome of forums, which are run annually by the Society.
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