Our study in the LAJTA Project is ground-breaking in several aspects of small carnivore trapping for domestic game management. During the trapping activity for the thinning of weasel and Norway rat, which took place for one year from August 2023, we gained experience in the use and capture efficiency of a device (Fenn Mark 4 type) not used in the country. Our results are compensatory not only because of the tool used, but also because the weasel is a protected species in Hungary and can only be thinned in the project area within the framework of our wildlife biology studies on this species. In the present study, 111 specimens of 3 species (weasel, Norway rat, domestic ferret) were captured during a one-year trapping period using 50 traps set over a length of 32 km. The catch effort (catch effort/100 trapping units) was 0.36 specimen/100TU for weasel (n=66), 0.23 specimen/100TU for Norway rat (n=42) and 0.59 specimen/100TU for all trapped species (n=111). 97% of the weasels captured were males, which also reflects the results of international studies well. Our results confirm that successful trapping of weasels and Norway rats can only be effective with a large amount of equipment and high manpower input if traps are set at the right time and in the right habitat types. The highest capture success rates in edge habitats were achieved for traps placed at the intersection of woody and herbaceous vegetation and multiple habitat types for both weasel and Norway rat. However, the seasonality of capture success differed for the two species studied. For the weasel, the predominant proportion (48.5%) was trapped in summer, whereas for the Norway rat, about 50% of the annual catches occurred in winter.
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