An investigation of the rat pest problem in Queensland canefields: 2. Species and general habits

Eleven Murid species are recorded from northern and/or central Queensland canefields. Five species are associated with damage to sugarcane. Rattus conatus is the most important economic rat pest of cane, owing to its ability to sustain mass attacks. Melomys littoralis is the second in importance; in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: McDougall, W.A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 1944
Subjects:
Online Access:http://era.daf.qld.gov.au/id/eprint/13363/
Description
Summary:Eleven Murid species are recorded from northern and/or central Queensland canefields. Five species are associated with damage to sugarcane. Rattus conatus is the most important economic rat pest of cane, owing to its ability to sustain mass attacks. Melomys littoralis is the second in importance; in some years when the greater proportion of the effect on cane is of a nuisance order only this is the species mainly responsible. The status of M. cervinipes as a pest of cane is indefinite, as its real distribution in years of heavy rat populations is not known. Rattus rattus and R. Culmorum are of little direct economic importance.