EFFICACY OF THREE ANTICOAGULANT RODENTICIDES FOR THE CONTROL OF POISON-SHY Rattus rattus

House rats (Rattus rattus) which do not consume a lethal dose of zinc phosphide develop poison-shyness after a single exposure. The surviving poison-shy rats cannot be baited again with zinc phosphide for about three months. Poison-shy rats were separately given anticoagulant baits (brodifa-coum 0.0...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bhardwaj, Devendra, Prakash, Ishwar
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln 1984
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/vpc11/5
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/vpc11/article/1004/viewcontent/Bhardwaj_efficacy_of_three.pdf
Description
Summary:House rats (Rattus rattus) which do not consume a lethal dose of zinc phosphide develop poison-shyness after a single exposure. The surviving poison-shy rats cannot be baited again with zinc phosphide for about three months. Poison-shy rats were separately given anticoagulant baits (brodifa-coum 0.005%, coumatetralyl and warfarin 0.025%) in no-choice tests. The first two anticoagulants were found to be the most efficient ones. It was observed that those R. rattus which had consumed 56.7 mg/kg or more zinc phosphide died sooner (P < 0.05 to 0.1) after anticoagulant poisoning when compared with normal rats. It is conjectured that prothrombin inhibition is accelerated in the liver of poison-shy R. rattus due to the action of phosphine present in the earlier ingested sublethal dose of zinc phosphide.