Risk assessment of birds foraging terrestrially at Marion and Gough Islands to primary and secondary poisoning by rodenticides

Context. Aerial application of poison bait pellets is an established and widely used method for removing invasive rodents and restoring insular ecological processes. However, the non-target effects of saturation poisoning require very careful consideration and precautionary risk-avoidance strategies...

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Main Authors: Wanless, R. M., Cooper, J., Slabber, M. J., Ryan, P. G.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: CSIRO Publishing 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/120856
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spelling ftunstellenbosch:oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/120856 2023-05-15T14:05:07+02:00 Risk assessment of birds foraging terrestrially at Marion and Gough Islands to primary and secondary poisoning by rodenticides Wanless, R. M. Cooper, J. Slabber, M. J. Ryan, P. G. 2011-05-16T10:15:15Z 145634 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/120856 en eng CSIRO Publishing Wanless, R.M., Cooper, J., Slabber, M.J. and Ryan, P.G. (2010) Risk assessment of birds foraging terrestrially at Marion and Gough Islands to primary and secondary poisoning by rodenticides. Wildlife Research, 37, 524-530 http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/120856 JournalArticles 2011 ftunstellenbosch 2021-08-31T00:09:00Z Context. Aerial application of poison bait pellets is an established and widely used method for removing invasive rodents and restoring insular ecological processes. However, the non-target effects of saturation poisoning require very careful consideration and precautionary risk-avoidance strategies. Aims. We assessed the risk of primary and secondary poisoning by rodenticides to terrestrially foraging lesser sheathbills (Chionis minor marionensis), Gough moorhens (Gallinula comeri) and Gough buntings (Rowettia goughensis) at Marion and Gough Islands. Methods. Birds taken into temporary captivity were offered non-toxic bait pellets dyed different colours and the carcasses of house mice (Mus musculus). In addition, dead mice were offered to these three species in the field, as well as to sub-Antarctic skuas (Catharacta antarctica) at both islands. Response to captivity was assessed by daily weighings. Key results. Individual birds either gained or lost mass overall during their 4–7 days in captivity. Whereas all captive birds pecked at the pellets, minimal amounts were consumed. However, Gough moorhens offered pellets in the field did consume them. Sheathbills (in captivity and in the field) and moorhens (in the field) consumed mouse carcasses, whereas buntings in captivity ate little from them. Sub-Antarctic skuas offered mouse carcasses in the field at both islands readily consumed them. At Gough Island some, but not all, skuas consumed bait in the field. Conclusions. Although the levels of assessed risk to primary and secondary poisoning differed among the three main species studied, it is recommended that populations for subsequent reintroduction be taken into temporary captivity before and during a poison-bait exercise as a precautionary measure. It is not deemed necessary to take sub-Antarctic skuas into captivity because they will be largely absent during a poisoning exercise in winter (the most likely period). Implications. Captive studies to assess susceptibility to primary and secondary poisoning are useful for determining positive risk; however, cage effects can cause false negatives by altering behaviours, and should be conducted with complimentary field trials. Where endemic species show any degree of risk (e.g. are vulnerable to the poison, regardless of how it might be ingested), precaution dictates that the risk be mitigated. Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Skuas Antarctica Stellenbosch University: SUNScholar Research Repository Antarctic Gough ENVELOPE(159.367,159.367,-81.633,-81.633) Chionis ENVELOPE(-60.633,-60.633,-63.883,-63.883)
institution Open Polar
collection Stellenbosch University: SUNScholar Research Repository
op_collection_id ftunstellenbosch
language English
description Context. Aerial application of poison bait pellets is an established and widely used method for removing invasive rodents and restoring insular ecological processes. However, the non-target effects of saturation poisoning require very careful consideration and precautionary risk-avoidance strategies. Aims. We assessed the risk of primary and secondary poisoning by rodenticides to terrestrially foraging lesser sheathbills (Chionis minor marionensis), Gough moorhens (Gallinula comeri) and Gough buntings (Rowettia goughensis) at Marion and Gough Islands. Methods. Birds taken into temporary captivity were offered non-toxic bait pellets dyed different colours and the carcasses of house mice (Mus musculus). In addition, dead mice were offered to these three species in the field, as well as to sub-Antarctic skuas (Catharacta antarctica) at both islands. Response to captivity was assessed by daily weighings. Key results. Individual birds either gained or lost mass overall during their 4–7 days in captivity. Whereas all captive birds pecked at the pellets, minimal amounts were consumed. However, Gough moorhens offered pellets in the field did consume them. Sheathbills (in captivity and in the field) and moorhens (in the field) consumed mouse carcasses, whereas buntings in captivity ate little from them. Sub-Antarctic skuas offered mouse carcasses in the field at both islands readily consumed them. At Gough Island some, but not all, skuas consumed bait in the field. Conclusions. Although the levels of assessed risk to primary and secondary poisoning differed among the three main species studied, it is recommended that populations for subsequent reintroduction be taken into temporary captivity before and during a poison-bait exercise as a precautionary measure. It is not deemed necessary to take sub-Antarctic skuas into captivity because they will be largely absent during a poisoning exercise in winter (the most likely period). Implications. Captive studies to assess susceptibility to primary and secondary poisoning are useful for determining positive risk; however, cage effects can cause false negatives by altering behaviours, and should be conducted with complimentary field trials. Where endemic species show any degree of risk (e.g. are vulnerable to the poison, regardless of how it might be ingested), precaution dictates that the risk be mitigated. Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology
format Other/Unknown Material
author Wanless, R. M.
Cooper, J.
Slabber, M. J.
Ryan, P. G.
spellingShingle Wanless, R. M.
Cooper, J.
Slabber, M. J.
Ryan, P. G.
Risk assessment of birds foraging terrestrially at Marion and Gough Islands to primary and secondary poisoning by rodenticides
author_facet Wanless, R. M.
Cooper, J.
Slabber, M. J.
Ryan, P. G.
author_sort Wanless, R. M.
title Risk assessment of birds foraging terrestrially at Marion and Gough Islands to primary and secondary poisoning by rodenticides
title_short Risk assessment of birds foraging terrestrially at Marion and Gough Islands to primary and secondary poisoning by rodenticides
title_full Risk assessment of birds foraging terrestrially at Marion and Gough Islands to primary and secondary poisoning by rodenticides
title_fullStr Risk assessment of birds foraging terrestrially at Marion and Gough Islands to primary and secondary poisoning by rodenticides
title_full_unstemmed Risk assessment of birds foraging terrestrially at Marion and Gough Islands to primary and secondary poisoning by rodenticides
title_sort risk assessment of birds foraging terrestrially at marion and gough islands to primary and secondary poisoning by rodenticides
publisher CSIRO Publishing
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/120856
long_lat ENVELOPE(159.367,159.367,-81.633,-81.633)
ENVELOPE(-60.633,-60.633,-63.883,-63.883)
geographic Antarctic
Gough
Chionis
geographic_facet Antarctic
Gough
Chionis
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Skuas
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Skuas
Antarctica
op_relation Wanless, R.M., Cooper, J., Slabber, M.J. and Ryan, P.G. (2010) Risk assessment of birds foraging terrestrially at Marion and Gough Islands to primary and secondary poisoning by rodenticides. Wildlife Research, 37, 524-530
http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/120856
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