Abstract

In New Zealand, aerial delivery of sodium fluoroacetate (1080) baits to poison introduced brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula) is a key pest management tool. GPS-guided broadcast baiting systems should expose all possums to large amounts of toxic bait, but some possums still survive despite being poisoned. This sub-lethal poisoning might reflect bait fragmentation, so we measured bait size before and after broadcast sowing from helicopter-slung buckets with spinners used to fling bait laterally. Mean bait size was smaller after sowing than before. The amount of fragmentation differed between operations and between buckets. Small fragments were concentrated under the flight path suggesting that they were caused by the spinner. Fragmentation increased with spinner speed. Removing the spinner resulted in less fragmentation. Use of spinners may therefore adversely affect poisoning efficacy by producing sub-lethal bait fragments. Solutions to this bait fragmenation problem include reducing spinner speed, removing the spinner, or development of shatterproof baits. A reduction in the amount of fragmentation is likely to reduce the need to sow large numbers of baits, so our findings could enable major reductions in toxin use.

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