Lord Howe Island Sees 60% Increase in Invertebrates After Rodent Eradication
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Lord Howe Island has observed a 60% increase in invertebrate populations, including native cockroaches, following the eradication of 300,000 invasive rodents in 2019, contributing to ecosystem recovery.
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Warum es wichtig ist
Lord Howe Island, a World Heritage site, underwent a successful rodent eradication program in 2019 to protect its unique biodiversity.
A boom in cockroach numbers is not often welcome news, but Lord Howe Island is a special kind of place. Invertebrate creatures, including native cockroaches and other insects, are thriving on the World Heritage-listed site after the removal of invasive rodents seven years ago. The invertebrate life is seen as fundamental to the broader ecosystem, helping break down organic matter and providing food for birds and native animals. "It feels like the island is coming to life," Sydney University honours student Maxim Adams said. "There's been about a 60 per cent increase in invertebrates." Mr Adams is co-lead in a study with the NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water (DCCEEW), published in Biological Invasions, examining how invertebrate communities have changed after the island-wide eradication of more than 300,000 rats and mice in 2019. The team collected invertebrate specimens from 20 forest sites across the island before the eradication program in 2016–17, then again seven years later, and compared the results. The first study saw about 9,000 specimens collected, compared to 15,000 collected in the second survey. "Invertebrates do the absolute heavy lifting of nutrient recycling, of fertilising the plants … all these wonderful ecosystem processes that make it this beautiful, lush spot we like to visit." The strongest increases were observed among larger invertebrates: those more than 13 millimetres long. "That matters because these animals are also an important food source for native predators including geckos and insect-eating birds." One species of Lord Howe Island cockroach was believed to be extinct, before being rediscovered in 2023. "It was the first sign these special invertebrates were starting to bounce back and we would be finding this unexpected diversity as the years progressed," Mr Adams said. Mr Adams noted that while total invertebrate abundance increased, overall diversity patterns were mixed, with some groups increasing while others declined. A new ecosystem emerging The findings came after previous studies documenting the strong bounce back of seabirds and native land birds after the rodent eradication, including the Lord Howe Island woodhen. But Mr Adams said it was unlikely the island's ecosystem would return to the state it was in before rodents were introduced more than a century ago. "The ecosystem will reach some new equilibrium, which is probably a bit different to what was there before," he said. "Part of the tragedy is that while some of these invertebrates have started to bounce back, others have [already] become extinct." Mr Adams is a student under Professor Nathan Lo, who leads the Molecular Ecology, Evolution and Phylogenomics laboratory at Sydney University. Professor Lo said things were looking positive for the island's biodiversity and the next step would be studying "higher-order predators" in the ecosystem, including geckos. "Ian Hutton, director of the Lord Howe Museum, took me out into the forest in the north of the island one night a few weeks ago," he said. "They are presumably eating all of the large invertebrates, in particular bush cockroaches and slaters, that have bounced back." Professor Lo said work was also underway to sequence the DNA of all the invertebrate samples. "This will give us precise information about which critters have been present on the island over the last 10 years, and help with their longer-term biosecurity and conservation," he said.
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Further increase in native predator populations feeding on invertebrates
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Offene Fragen
- Long-term sustainability of invertebrate population growth
- Full extent of ecosystem recovery


