Reducing the primary exposure risk of Henderson crakes (Zapornia atra) during aerial broadcast eradication by selecting appropriate bait colour

Context. Operations to eradicate non-native invasive predators from islands frequently put native species at risk of consuming harmful substances, such as poison bait. The incorporation of certain colours in poison-bait pellets may reduce the risk of bait consumption and, therefore, non-target morta...

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Published in:Wildlife Research
Main Authors: Steffen Oppel, Jennifer L. Lavers, Alexander L. Bond, Gavin Harrison
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: CSIRO Publishing 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1071/WR15198
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spelling ftbioone:10.1071/WR15198 2024-06-02T08:07:50+00:00 Reducing the primary exposure risk of Henderson crakes (Zapornia atra) during aerial broadcast eradication by selecting appropriate bait colour Steffen Oppel Jennifer L. Lavers Alexander L. Bond Gavin Harrison Steffen Oppel Jennifer L. Lavers Alexander L. Bond Gavin Harrison world 2016-06-17 text/HTML https://doi.org/10.1071/WR15198 en eng CSIRO Publishing doi:10.1071/WR15198 All rights reserved. https://doi.org/10.1071/WR15198 Text 2016 ftbioone https://doi.org/10.1071/WR15198 2024-05-07T00:50:12Z Context. Operations to eradicate non-native invasive predators from islands frequently put native species at risk of consuming harmful substances, such as poison bait. The incorporation of certain colours in poison-bait pellets may reduce the risk of bait consumption and, therefore, non-target mortality. Previous work indicated that birds generally avoid blue or green colours; however, there is substantial inter-specific variation in this preference, and more experimental work on species of conservation concern is needed.Aims. We tested whether a globally threatened island endemic, the Henderson crake (Zapornia atra), which suffered substantial mortality during a rat-eradication attempt on Henderson Island in 2011, would consume fewer blue than green pellets, which were used during the previous eradication attempt.Methods. We held 22 Henderson crakes in captivity and provided them with either blue or green non-toxic pellets for 5 days in June and July 2015. We measured consumption and used linear mixed models to evaluate whether bait colour influenced consumption.Key results. Henderson crakes did not consume any dry pellets, and all trials were conducted with wet bait pellets. We found slightly lower consumption of blue pellets than green pellets, and substantial variation among individuals. Females (n = 17) consumed 24% less blue than green bait, whereas males (n = 5) consumed 77% less blue than green bait.Conclusion. Henderson crakes are unlikely to consume dry pellets, and will likely consume fewer blue than green bait pellets.Implications. We recommend that any future rat eradication on Henderson Island considers using blue rather than green baits and targets dry weather to reduce the risk of Henderson crakes consuming toxic rodenticide bait pellets. Text Henderson Island BioOne Online Journals Henderson Island ENVELOPE(97.200,97.200,-66.367,-66.367) Wildlife Research 43 4 298
institution Open Polar
collection BioOne Online Journals
op_collection_id ftbioone
language English
description Context. Operations to eradicate non-native invasive predators from islands frequently put native species at risk of consuming harmful substances, such as poison bait. The incorporation of certain colours in poison-bait pellets may reduce the risk of bait consumption and, therefore, non-target mortality. Previous work indicated that birds generally avoid blue or green colours; however, there is substantial inter-specific variation in this preference, and more experimental work on species of conservation concern is needed.Aims. We tested whether a globally threatened island endemic, the Henderson crake (Zapornia atra), which suffered substantial mortality during a rat-eradication attempt on Henderson Island in 2011, would consume fewer blue than green pellets, which were used during the previous eradication attempt.Methods. We held 22 Henderson crakes in captivity and provided them with either blue or green non-toxic pellets for 5 days in June and July 2015. We measured consumption and used linear mixed models to evaluate whether bait colour influenced consumption.Key results. Henderson crakes did not consume any dry pellets, and all trials were conducted with wet bait pellets. We found slightly lower consumption of blue pellets than green pellets, and substantial variation among individuals. Females (n = 17) consumed 24% less blue than green bait, whereas males (n = 5) consumed 77% less blue than green bait.Conclusion. Henderson crakes are unlikely to consume dry pellets, and will likely consume fewer blue than green bait pellets.Implications. We recommend that any future rat eradication on Henderson Island considers using blue rather than green baits and targets dry weather to reduce the risk of Henderson crakes consuming toxic rodenticide bait pellets.
author2 Steffen Oppel
Jennifer L. Lavers
Alexander L. Bond
Gavin Harrison
format Text
author Steffen Oppel
Jennifer L. Lavers
Alexander L. Bond
Gavin Harrison
spellingShingle Steffen Oppel
Jennifer L. Lavers
Alexander L. Bond
Gavin Harrison
Reducing the primary exposure risk of Henderson crakes (Zapornia atra) during aerial broadcast eradication by selecting appropriate bait colour
author_facet Steffen Oppel
Jennifer L. Lavers
Alexander L. Bond
Gavin Harrison
author_sort Steffen Oppel
title Reducing the primary exposure risk of Henderson crakes (Zapornia atra) during aerial broadcast eradication by selecting appropriate bait colour
title_short Reducing the primary exposure risk of Henderson crakes (Zapornia atra) during aerial broadcast eradication by selecting appropriate bait colour
title_full Reducing the primary exposure risk of Henderson crakes (Zapornia atra) during aerial broadcast eradication by selecting appropriate bait colour
title_fullStr Reducing the primary exposure risk of Henderson crakes (Zapornia atra) during aerial broadcast eradication by selecting appropriate bait colour
title_full_unstemmed Reducing the primary exposure risk of Henderson crakes (Zapornia atra) during aerial broadcast eradication by selecting appropriate bait colour
title_sort reducing the primary exposure risk of henderson crakes (zapornia atra) during aerial broadcast eradication by selecting appropriate bait colour
publisher CSIRO Publishing
publishDate 2016
url https://doi.org/10.1071/WR15198
op_coverage world
long_lat ENVELOPE(97.200,97.200,-66.367,-66.367)
geographic Henderson Island
geographic_facet Henderson Island
genre Henderson Island
genre_facet Henderson Island
op_source https://doi.org/10.1071/WR15198
op_relation doi:10.1071/WR15198
op_rights All rights reserved.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1071/WR15198
container_title Wildlife Research
container_volume 43
container_issue 4
container_start_page 298
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