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1 July 2008 Colony-Site Selection Drives Management Priorities for Yelkouan Shearwater Populations
Karen Bourgeois, Eric Vidal, Vincent Comor, Jerome Legrand, Sylvain Dromzee
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Abstract

We tested whether colony-site availability could allow for an increase in the unusually small breeding populations of yelkouan shearwater (Puffinus yelkouan) on the islands of the Port-Cros National Park (France) if feral cat eradication were undertaken. Comparisons between colony and noncolony sites indicated yelkouan shearwaters preferred deep-soiled and low-outcrop–covered coastal sites. A substrate cover, light avoidance, and sea proximity model suggested that 17.5% of unoccupied sites are suitable for colony establishment. The low proportion of suitable sites currently used by yelkouan shearwaters suggests that these colonies could be refuges and that feral cat eradication will probably lead to a breeding population increase.

Karen Bourgeois, Eric Vidal, Vincent Comor, Jerome Legrand, and Sylvain Dromzee "Colony-Site Selection Drives Management Priorities for Yelkouan Shearwater Populations," Journal of Wildlife Management 72(5), 1188-1193, (1 July 2008). https://doi.org/10.2193/2007-052
Published: 1 July 2008
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KEYWORDS
breeding habitat selection
French Mediterranean islands
logistic regression
Puffinus yelkouan
seabirds
suitable colony-site availability
yelkouan shearwater
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