Managing for cultural harvest of a valued introduced species, the Pacific rat (Rattus exulans) in Aotearoa New Zealand

IF 1.6 Q3 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Pacific Conservation Biology Pub Date : 2021-08-03 DOI:10.1071/pc20094
P. Wehi, D. Wilson, Clive Stone, H. Ricardo, Chris Jones, R. Jakob-Hoff, P. Lyver
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Indigenous peoples’ relationships with biodiversity are often poorly recognised in conservation decision-making, but are critical to Indigenous identity and lifeways. These relationships extend to introduced species that are rarely protected under legislation. Kiore (Rattus exulans, Pacific rat) is a species introduced to Aotearoa New Zealand (hereafter Aotearoa) by Māori (the Indigenous people of Aotearoa) as a food source and bio-indicator of ecosystem state. Once common, kiore are now restricted in numbers and range, and widely considered an unwanted organism by conservation managers and some Māori. However, tribal group Ngātiwai wish to safeguard cultural access to remaining kiore on Mauitaha Island. Therefore, the goals of our study were to assess body condition and the reproductive and disease status of kiore on Mauitaha. Of 16 kiore caught, body condition based on body length to mass ratio was similar to that recorded on other islands in Aotearoa. Subcutaneous fat levels were moderate, but lower in individuals with disease inflammation. The results suggest satisfactory population health, but regular monitoring to identify temporal trends in kiore abundance and condition is important for cultural harvesting and long-term population survival. Planning for harvesting by future generations requires transforming conservation biology through Indigenous perspectives, through further assessment of methods, management and agency, examining how Indigenous knowledge and conventional science can be used to balance ecological and cultural trade-offs. Further consideration of ecological habitat and risk is also required for kiore, because the reserve is a single small island, and national conservation priorities focus on native species protection in ecosystems that exclude humans.
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管理一个有价值的引进物种,太平洋鼠(Rattus exulans)在新西兰奥特罗阿的文化收获
土著人民与生物多样性的关系在保护决策中往往得不到认可,但对土著身份和生活方式至关重要。这些关系延伸到很少受到法律保护的引进物种。Kiore(Rattus exulans,Pacific rat)是由毛利人(Aotearoa土著人)引入新西兰Aotearo(以下简称Aotearoa)的一个物种,作为食物来源和生态系统状态的生物指标。kiore曾经很常见,但现在在数量和范围上都受到限制,保护管理人员和一些毛利人普遍认为它是一种不受欢迎的生物。然而,部落团体Ngātiwai希望保护文化进入Mauitaha岛上剩余的基奥雷。因此,我们研究的目的是评估毛伊塔岛基奥雷的身体状况以及繁殖和疾病状况。在捕获的16个基奥雷中,基于体长质量比的身体状况与奥特亚其他岛屿的记录相似。皮下脂肪水平中等,但在患有疾病炎症的个体中较低。结果表明,种群健康状况令人满意,但定期监测以确定基奥雷丰度和条件的时间趋势对文化收获和种群长期生存很重要。规划子孙后代的收获需要通过土著视角,通过对方法、管理和机构的进一步评估,改变保护生物学,研究如何利用土著知识和传统科学来平衡生态和文化权衡。基奥雷还需要进一步考虑生态栖息地和风险,因为保护区是一个单一的小岛,国家保护的重点是保护不包括人类的生态系统中的本土物种。
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来源期刊
Pacific Conservation Biology
Pacific Conservation Biology Environmental Science-Nature and Landscape Conservation
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
6.70%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: Pacific Conservation Biology provides an important discussion forum for regional conservation issues, debate about management priorities, and dissemination of research results. The journal publishes original research, reviews, perspectives and book reviews.
期刊最新文献
Ivor Beatty Award 2022 Special issues in Pacific Conservation Biology – an update <i>Corrigendum to</i>: The role of grass-tree <i>Xanthorrhoea semiplana</i> (Asphodelaceae) canopies in temperature regulation and waterproofing for ground-dwelling wildlife <i>Corrigendum to</i>: Community-driven shark monitoring for informed decision making: a case study from Fiji Retraction notice to ‘Key research priorities for the future of fish and fisheries in Australia’ [Pacific Conservation Biology (2022) doi:10.1071/PC21073]
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