Effect of prefeeding, sowing rate and sowing pattern on efficacy of aerial 1080 poisoning of small-mammal pests in New Zealand

Context. Aerial poisoning using sodium fluoroacetate (1080) is an important but controversial technique used for large-scale control of brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula) and other pests in New Zealand. The technique reliably produces near total kills of possums and rats, provided that many t...

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Published in:Wildlife Research
Main Authors: Nugent, Graham, Warburton, Bruce, Thomson, Caroline, Sweetapple, Peter, RUSCOE, Wendy
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchprofiles.canberra.edu.au/en/publications/bd155b98-8c3b-400b-9ca5-2257745b826a
https://doi.org/10.1071/WR10198
https://researchsystem.canberra.edu.au/ws/files/20280727/Nugent_2011_Effect_of_prefeeding_sowing_rate.pdf
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spelling ftcanberrauncris:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/bd155b98-8c3b-400b-9ca5-2257745b826a 2024-09-15T18:32:09+00:00 Effect of prefeeding, sowing rate and sowing pattern on efficacy of aerial 1080 poisoning of small-mammal pests in New Zealand Nugent, Graham Warburton, Bruce Thomson, Caroline Sweetapple, Peter RUSCOE, Wendy 2011 application/pdf https://researchprofiles.canberra.edu.au/en/publications/bd155b98-8c3b-400b-9ca5-2257745b826a https://doi.org/10.1071/WR10198 https://researchsystem.canberra.edu.au/ws/files/20280727/Nugent_2011_Effect_of_prefeeding_sowing_rate.pdf eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Nugent , G , Warburton , B , Thomson , C , Sweetapple , P & RUSCOE , W 2011 , ' Effect of prefeeding, sowing rate and sowing pattern on efficacy of aerial 1080 poisoning of small-mammal pests in New Zealand ' , Wildlife Research , vol. 38 , pp. 249-259 . https://doi.org/10.1071/WR10198 article 2011 ftcanberrauncris https://doi.org/10.1071/WR10198 2024-07-17T23:33:53Z Context. Aerial poisoning using sodium fluoroacetate (1080) is an important but controversial technique used for large-scale control of brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula) and other pests in New Zealand. The technique reliably produces near total kills of possums and rats, provided that many tens of baits (and therefore many tens of individually lethal doses) are sown for each target animal present. Aim. The aim of this study was to further refine aerial 1080 poisoning by determining the effect of prefeeding, sowing rate, and sowing pattern on effectiveness. Methods. Eighteen experimental treatments comprising all possible combinations of three sowing rates (1, 2, and 5 kg/ha of bait), three frequencies of non-toxic prefeed (0, 1, and 2) and two sowing patterns (parallel and cross-hatched) were applied to each of two forested areas. Treatment effectiveness was assessed from changes in the rate of interference recorded on baited cards for three species: possum, ship rat (Rattus rattus) and mouse (Mus musculus). Key results. Outcomes were highly variable, ranging from increases in pest activity to near total reductions. Possum reductions were highest where one or two prefeeds were used, and at the higher sowing rates (2 or 5 kg/ha), but with some interactions between these factors. For rats, two prefeeds resulted in the highest reductions but sowing rate had no effect. For mice, post-poisoning indices were often high, indicating low effectiveness. Conclusions. Some treatments were highly effective so poor kills were unlikely to have resulted from pests not encountering bait, or the bait being unpalatable. Rather they appeared to reflect sub-lethal poisoning either as a result of low acceptance (as a result of a lack of familiarity and/or satiation) or bait fragmentation. We infer that for possum and rats prefeeding helps reduce this risk of sub-lethal poisoning not only by increasing familiarity, but also (in conjunction with high sowing rates) by increasing the bait encounter rate, particularly for possums. ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Rattus rattus University of Canberra Research Portal Wildlife Research 38 3 249
institution Open Polar
collection University of Canberra Research Portal
op_collection_id ftcanberrauncris
language English
description Context. Aerial poisoning using sodium fluoroacetate (1080) is an important but controversial technique used for large-scale control of brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula) and other pests in New Zealand. The technique reliably produces near total kills of possums and rats, provided that many tens of baits (and therefore many tens of individually lethal doses) are sown for each target animal present. Aim. The aim of this study was to further refine aerial 1080 poisoning by determining the effect of prefeeding, sowing rate, and sowing pattern on effectiveness. Methods. Eighteen experimental treatments comprising all possible combinations of three sowing rates (1, 2, and 5 kg/ha of bait), three frequencies of non-toxic prefeed (0, 1, and 2) and two sowing patterns (parallel and cross-hatched) were applied to each of two forested areas. Treatment effectiveness was assessed from changes in the rate of interference recorded on baited cards for three species: possum, ship rat (Rattus rattus) and mouse (Mus musculus). Key results. Outcomes were highly variable, ranging from increases in pest activity to near total reductions. Possum reductions were highest where one or two prefeeds were used, and at the higher sowing rates (2 or 5 kg/ha), but with some interactions between these factors. For rats, two prefeeds resulted in the highest reductions but sowing rate had no effect. For mice, post-poisoning indices were often high, indicating low effectiveness. Conclusions. Some treatments were highly effective so poor kills were unlikely to have resulted from pests not encountering bait, or the bait being unpalatable. Rather they appeared to reflect sub-lethal poisoning either as a result of low acceptance (as a result of a lack of familiarity and/or satiation) or bait fragmentation. We infer that for possum and rats prefeeding helps reduce this risk of sub-lethal poisoning not only by increasing familiarity, but also (in conjunction with high sowing rates) by increasing the bait encounter rate, particularly for possums. ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Nugent, Graham
Warburton, Bruce
Thomson, Caroline
Sweetapple, Peter
RUSCOE, Wendy
spellingShingle Nugent, Graham
Warburton, Bruce
Thomson, Caroline
Sweetapple, Peter
RUSCOE, Wendy
Effect of prefeeding, sowing rate and sowing pattern on efficacy of aerial 1080 poisoning of small-mammal pests in New Zealand
author_facet Nugent, Graham
Warburton, Bruce
Thomson, Caroline
Sweetapple, Peter
RUSCOE, Wendy
author_sort Nugent, Graham
title Effect of prefeeding, sowing rate and sowing pattern on efficacy of aerial 1080 poisoning of small-mammal pests in New Zealand
title_short Effect of prefeeding, sowing rate and sowing pattern on efficacy of aerial 1080 poisoning of small-mammal pests in New Zealand
title_full Effect of prefeeding, sowing rate and sowing pattern on efficacy of aerial 1080 poisoning of small-mammal pests in New Zealand
title_fullStr Effect of prefeeding, sowing rate and sowing pattern on efficacy of aerial 1080 poisoning of small-mammal pests in New Zealand
title_full_unstemmed Effect of prefeeding, sowing rate and sowing pattern on efficacy of aerial 1080 poisoning of small-mammal pests in New Zealand
title_sort effect of prefeeding, sowing rate and sowing pattern on efficacy of aerial 1080 poisoning of small-mammal pests in new zealand
publishDate 2011
url https://researchprofiles.canberra.edu.au/en/publications/bd155b98-8c3b-400b-9ca5-2257745b826a
https://doi.org/10.1071/WR10198
https://researchsystem.canberra.edu.au/ws/files/20280727/Nugent_2011_Effect_of_prefeeding_sowing_rate.pdf
genre Rattus rattus
genre_facet Rattus rattus
op_source Nugent , G , Warburton , B , Thomson , C , Sweetapple , P & RUSCOE , W 2011 , ' Effect of prefeeding, sowing rate and sowing pattern on efficacy of aerial 1080 poisoning of small-mammal pests in New Zealand ' , Wildlife Research , vol. 38 , pp. 249-259 . https://doi.org/10.1071/WR10198
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1071/WR10198
container_title Wildlife Research
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