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Dr
Michael Brooke
Tel: +44 (0)
1223 336 610
Fax: +44 (0) 1223 336 676
Email: mb10005 at cam.ac.uk
Position held:
Hans Gadow Memorial Fellow; Strickland Curator of Ornithology |
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| Research |
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My
conservation work is connected to my position as Curator of Birds
in the University Museum of Zoology and ranges from the strictly
practical to more theoretical research which nevertheless aims to
provide information of direct use to conservation planning. This
spectrum is reflected in the work of recent research students who
have studied, inter alia, declining ring ousels in Britain, the
endemic vertebrates of Sri Lanka, and what causes the apparent male
adult sex ratio bias among threatened bird species
ISLANDS. Through connections with the UK
Overseas Territories Conservation Forum and the Royal
Society for the Protection of Birds, I am involved with ongoing
programmes to remove troublesome alien species from oceanic islands.
The possibility of eradicating rats from Henderson Island, in the
Pitcairn Islands in the South Pacific, is fast moving up the agenda.
A companion desk study, undertaken collaboratively with the RSPB,
investigated how, at a global level, such eradication programmes
might be prioritised in terms of their conservation worth to birds
(see selected publications).
There may be scope for expanding this work to integrate other taxa.
While the know-how for ridding islands of invasives is improving
fast, the information on how rapidly species of conservation concern
recover after an eradication is poor. Can we develop a better understanding
of the circumstances in which that recovery is given a kick-start
by immigration, as opposed to enhanced reproductive success?
Since 2002, I have led a small team monitoring the population dynamics
of the critically threatened Raso Lark (world population approx.
100) of the Cape Verdes, a species displaying a marked male sex
ratio bias (see selected
publications)
SEABIRDS. Seabirds continue to throw up taxonomic
problems. Slightly perversely, these may be due to the extreme philopatry
of some species and the considerable post-Pleistocene range lability
of others. Resolution of the taxonomic uncertainty will help ensure
conservation resources are wisely targeted.
One seabird of great interest, because of its extraordinary range
expansion, is the Northern Fulmar. Our contemporary studies (see
selected publications)
provided little support for the traditional 'out-of-Iceland' scenario
for the expansion. We are currently exploring whether the picture
painted by 100-year old museum specimens is similar.
ECTOPARASITES. Following from earlier studies of
cuckoos, I explored how cuckoo-specific featherlice might be transmitted
from one cuckoo generation to the next (see selected
publications). This study has prompted further research on feather
louse transmission in blackbirds. An understanding of mechanics
of louse transmission will strengthen understanding the basis for
host specificity among lice and indeed other ectoparasites.
BIRD PLUMAGE. While some aspects of bird plumage
are clearly related to sexual selection, we lack any general predictive
framework for bird coloration. I would therefore welcome any projects
designed to investigate more ecological explanations of bird colours.
One recent research student studied the widespread occurrence of
black-brown sexual dimorphism among passerine birds.
Students who might wish to join our group are more than welcome
to suggest their own projects. They might fall within one of the
above headings, but that is certainly not a pre-requisite.
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| Selected
Publications (click here for a complete
list) |
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Some
books by Michael Brooke
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- Brooke, M.
de L. & Nakamura, H. 1998. The acquisition of host-specific
feather lice by common cuckoos. J. Zool. 244: 159-165.
- Brooke, M.
de L. 1998. Ecological factors influencing the occurrence of 'flash
marks' in wading birds. Functional Ecology 12: 339-346.
- Brooke, M.
de L. 2001. Systematics and distribution of seabirds of the world:
a review of current knowledge. Pp. 57-83 in ‘The Biology
of Marine Birds’ (ed. E-A Schreiber & J. Berger).
CRC Press, Boca Raton.
- Brooke, M.
de L. 2003. Albatrosses and petrels across the world. Oxford
University Press, Oxford.
- Brooke, M.
de L, Hilton, G. & Martins, T.L.F. 2007. Prioritising the
world's islands for vertebrate eradication programmes. Anim.
Conserv., 10: 380-390.
- Burg, T.M.,
Almond, R., Lomax, J., Brooke, M. de L. & Amos, W. 2003. Unravelling
dispersal patterns in an expanding population of a highly mobile
seabird, the northern fulmar. Proc. Roy. Soc. B. 270:
979-984.
- Donald, P.F.
& Brooke, M. de L. 2006. An unlikely survivor: the peculiar
natural history of the Raso Lark. Brit. Birds, 99: 420-430.
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Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge
CB2 3EJ, U. K. |