Abstract

Abstract Rodents and other small mammals cause an increasing number of negative economic and environmental impacts worldwide. In the UK, the non‐native grey squirrel has a significant impact on the forestry industry and has caused the decline of the native red squirrel. Baits are used to deliver biocides and contraceptives to reduce overabundant wildlife populations and as vehicles for vaccines to control disease outbreaks. Bait‐delivered contraceptives are also being developed to manage grey squirrel populations in the UK. The effectiveness of bait‐delivered drugs on wildlife populations depends on the amount of bait consumed by individuals over time; therefore, it is important to understand individual level bait uptake in order to optimize delivery methods. Passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags are increasingly used to mark and monitor animal behaviour as they are cost‐effective, have minimal negative welfare impacts and have a lower tag loss rate than external tags, particularly in small animals. The aim of this study was to design and test a novel bait hopper equipped with a PIT‐tag reader and bait‐weighing device, to record bait uptake by individual grey squirrels for optimizing the delivery of a contraceptive bait. The hopper was designed to overcome some of the limitations of traditional PIT‐tag systems, by improving battery life and the quality and quantity of data collected in the field. In captive trials, the hopper proved to be highly effective at recording feeding visits by squirrels, as 95% of the visits could be attributed to a PIT‐tag record. The hoppers measured the amount of bait removed per feeding visit to an accuracy of 0.1 g, with 97% of the bait taken from six hoppers attributed to a PIT‐tag ID. In a field trial, the hoppers were effective at recording the feeding visits by grey squirrels in two woods, with 47 of the 51 PIT‐tagged grey squirrels entering the hoppers. The adaptability of the hopper design means that it has wider applications for wildlife management; in particular, efficacy studies for bait‐delivered substances in the context of wildlife disease control and/or population reduction.

Highlights

  • Rodents and other small mammals cause an increasing number of negative economic and environmental impacts worldwide, including losses to the food industry, damage to property and the transmission of diseases (Messmer, 2019)

  • 97 feeding visits, 47 full visits and 102 partial visits to the three hoppers by grey squirrels were recorded on circuit television (CCTV) during the trial

  • A Passive Integrated Transponder (PIT)-tag was detected for 100% of feeding visits, 96% of full visits and 64% of partial visits; a PIT-tag ID was established for 95% of feeding visits, 77% of full visits and 25% of partial visits

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Rodents and other small mammals cause an increasing number of negative economic and environmental impacts worldwide, including losses to the food industry, damage to property and the transmission of diseases (Messmer, 2019). In the UK, the grey squirrel Sciurus carolinensis causes an estimated £10 million in tree damage per annum (Derbridge et al, 2016) and is responsible for the decline of the native red squirrel S. vulgaris (Gurnell et al, 2016; Rushton et al, 2006). Bait-delivered contraceptives could be used to manage grey squirrel populations (Dunn et al, 2018) and this is a research objective in the current UK Government management plan for the species (Forestry Commission, 2014). Bait markers such as tetracycline (Algeo et al, 2013), iophenoxic acid (Marks & Bloomfield, 1999)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.