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ThreatsAnimal PestsMammalsMustelids

Mustelids

From a bird perspective undoubtedly the most serious animal pests to have been introduced to New Zealand are the mustelids: stoat, ferret and weasel.

These are slender bodied carnivorous mammals that naturally occur throughout Asia, Europe and North America. While these do not eat native plants they, along with possums, kill native bird species that are vital for seed dispersal and/or pollination of many native plant species.

By the mid 1870s, rabbits were becoming an agricultural pest in New Zealand. Farmers demanded that mustelids be introduced as a biological control agent. Despite protests, ferrets, stoats and weasels were released throughout pastoral areas and by the mid 1890s they had spread into forests west of Lake Manapouri. It took till 1936 for all legal protection of mustelids to be removed. Mustelids are now regarded as a significant pest species in New Zealand.

Some research estimates that stoats kill 40 North Island brown kiwi chicks per day on average. Ferrets mainly feed on rabbits but ground nesting birds are also easy prey. Weasels have been implicated in the demise of lizard, invertebrate and bird populations.

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Last updated: 18 Jan 2010
 

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