パタゴニアのペンギンは回復するピューマによって脅かされるのか―新研究がリスクを定量評価(Are returning pumas putting Patagonian penguins at risk? New study reveals the likelihood)

2026-02-05 オックスフォード大学

英オックスフォード大学の研究チームは、南米パタゴニア地域で再定着しつつあるピューマが、沿岸で繁殖するペンギンに与える影響を評価した。生息地データ、捕食行動の記録、地形条件を統合した確率モデルにより、ピューマがペンギン繁殖地へ到達する可能性と捕食リスクを定量化した。その結果、多くの繁殖地では地形や距離が天然の防壁となり、短期的なリスクは限定的である一方、アクセス可能な一部地点ではリスクが高まる可能性が示された。研究は、捕食者の回復が直ちに保全上の脅威となるわけではなく、場所ごとのリスク評価と順応的管理が重要であることを示している。成果は、野生動物の再定着と海鳥保全の両立に向けた科学的根拠を提供する。

<関連情報>

陸と海の境界における捕食者と被食者の動態の変化:マゼランペンギンとピューマの事例 Shifting predator–prey dynamics at the land–sea interface: The case of Magellanic penguins and pumas

Melisa Lera, Esteban Frere, Jorgelina Marino, Annick Morgenthaler, Sandra Lai, Ana Millones

Journal for Nature Conservation  Available online: 12 January 2026

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jnc.2025.127208

パタゴニアのペンギンは回復するピューマによって脅かされるのか―新研究がリスクを定量評価(Are returning pumas putting Patagonian penguins at risk? New study reveals the likelihood)

Highlights

  • Pumas caused measurable penguin mortality and can slow population growth.
  • Field data revealed surplus killing, with many carcasses only partly consumed.
  • Population models were most sensitive to juvenile survival and breeding success.
  • Extinction risk rose only under poor reproduction and low juvenile survival.

Abstract

The expansion of Magellanic penguins into mainland territory in Argentina is providing a new prey to recovering puma populations. This dietary shift was first reported about 20 years ago, but its extent remains poorly studied. Here, we present a comprehensive analysis of puma predation on penguins in Monte León National Park (MLNP), in Argentinian Patagonia, and explore its effects on this breeding population. We analysed puma predation over four consecutive breeding seasons (2007–2010) and modelled the demography of the colony under different reproductive success, juvenile survival, and puma-induced mortality rates, to test whether sustained mortality could compromise its long-term persistence. We estimated that, during our study, 7,087 adult penguins were killed in total, representing a cumulative 7,60 % of the breeding population. Puma predation occurred throughout the entire colony, with hotspots on the southern and northern edges, and included events of surplus killing. Demographically, the population was most sensitive to variations in juvenile survival and reproductive success. Regardless of the predation level, low reproductive success combined with low or medium juvenile survival led to extinction within 100 years. Puma predation lowered population growth but did not cause colony extinction; substantial reductions occurred under medium reproductive success with low juvenile survival, or low reproductive success with high juvenile survival. These findings highlight a broader conservation concern: the growing vulnerability of mainland seabird colonies to terrestrial predator expansion. We recommend sustained monitoring of this and other colonies to detect early demographic declines and inform management actions to mitigate excessive puma predation.

1903自然環境保全
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