Wild dog control impacts on calf wastage in extensive beef cattle enterprises

Wild dogs (Canis lupus dingo and hybrids) are routinely controlled to protect beef cattle from predation yet beef producers are sometimes ambivalent as to whether wild dogs are a significant problem or not. This paper reports the loss of calves between birth and weaning in pregnancy-tested herds loc...

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Published in:Animal Production Science
Main Author: Allen, Lee R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://era.daf.qld.gov.au/id/eprint/4062/
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spelling ftqueenslanddeaf:oai:jdecs1.ecs.soton.ac.uk:4062 2023-05-15T15:50:48+02:00 Wild dog control impacts on calf wastage in extensive beef cattle enterprises Allen, Lee R. 2014 http://era.daf.qld.gov.au/id/eprint/4062/ unknown http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/AN12356 http://era.daf.qld.gov.au/id/eprint/4062/ Allen, L. R. (2014) Wild dog control impacts on calf wastage in extensive beef cattle enterprises. Animal Production Science, 54 (2). pp. 214-220. Impact assessment Article PeerReviewed 2014 ftqueenslanddeaf https://doi.org/10.1071/AN12356 2022-05-30T13:30:26Z Wild dogs (Canis lupus dingo and hybrids) are routinely controlled to protect beef cattle from predation yet beef producers are sometimes ambivalent as to whether wild dogs are a significant problem or not. This paper reports the loss of calves between birth and weaning in pregnancy-tested herds located on two beef cattle properties in south-central and far north Queensland for up to 4 consecutive years. Comparisons of lactation failures (identified when dams that previously tested pregnant were found non-lactating at weaning) were made between adjoining test herds grazed in places with or without annual (or twice annual) wild dog poison baiting programs. No correlation between wild dog relative abundance and lactation failures was apparent. Calf loss was frequently higher (three in 7 site-years, 11–32%) in baited areas than in non-baited areas (9% in 1 of 7 site-years). Predation loss of calves (in either area) only occurred in seasons of below-average rainfall, but was not related to herd nutrition. These data suggest that controlling wild dogs to protect calves on extensive beef cattle enterprises is unnecessary in most years because wild dogs do not routinely prey on calves. In those seasons when wild dog predation might occur, baiting can be counter-productive. Baiting appears to produce perturbations that change the way surviving or re-colonising wild dog populations select and handle prey and/or how they interact with livestock. Article in Journal/Newspaper Canis lupus eRA (eResearch Archive - Queensland Department of Agriculture and Fisheries) Queensland Animal Production Science 54 2 214
institution Open Polar
collection eRA (eResearch Archive - Queensland Department of Agriculture and Fisheries)
op_collection_id ftqueenslanddeaf
language unknown
topic Impact assessment
spellingShingle Impact assessment
Allen, Lee R.
Wild dog control impacts on calf wastage in extensive beef cattle enterprises
topic_facet Impact assessment
description Wild dogs (Canis lupus dingo and hybrids) are routinely controlled to protect beef cattle from predation yet beef producers are sometimes ambivalent as to whether wild dogs are a significant problem or not. This paper reports the loss of calves between birth and weaning in pregnancy-tested herds located on two beef cattle properties in south-central and far north Queensland for up to 4 consecutive years. Comparisons of lactation failures (identified when dams that previously tested pregnant were found non-lactating at weaning) were made between adjoining test herds grazed in places with or without annual (or twice annual) wild dog poison baiting programs. No correlation between wild dog relative abundance and lactation failures was apparent. Calf loss was frequently higher (three in 7 site-years, 11–32%) in baited areas than in non-baited areas (9% in 1 of 7 site-years). Predation loss of calves (in either area) only occurred in seasons of below-average rainfall, but was not related to herd nutrition. These data suggest that controlling wild dogs to protect calves on extensive beef cattle enterprises is unnecessary in most years because wild dogs do not routinely prey on calves. In those seasons when wild dog predation might occur, baiting can be counter-productive. Baiting appears to produce perturbations that change the way surviving or re-colonising wild dog populations select and handle prey and/or how they interact with livestock.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Allen, Lee R.
author_facet Allen, Lee R.
author_sort Allen, Lee R.
title Wild dog control impacts on calf wastage in extensive beef cattle enterprises
title_short Wild dog control impacts on calf wastage in extensive beef cattle enterprises
title_full Wild dog control impacts on calf wastage in extensive beef cattle enterprises
title_fullStr Wild dog control impacts on calf wastage in extensive beef cattle enterprises
title_full_unstemmed Wild dog control impacts on calf wastage in extensive beef cattle enterprises
title_sort wild dog control impacts on calf wastage in extensive beef cattle enterprises
publishDate 2014
url http://era.daf.qld.gov.au/id/eprint/4062/
geographic Queensland
geographic_facet Queensland
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_relation http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/AN12356
http://era.daf.qld.gov.au/id/eprint/4062/
Allen, L. R. (2014) Wild dog control impacts on calf wastage in extensive beef cattle enterprises. Animal Production Science, 54 (2). pp. 214-220.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1071/AN12356
container_title Animal Production Science
container_volume 54
container_issue 2
container_start_page 214
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