Author:
Allen LR,Fleming PJS,Thompson JA,Strong K
Abstract
Factory-prepared beef crackle cubes and fresh meat baits are routinely used with the poison 1080 to
prevent or reduce predation by wild dogs, Canis familiaris. Four field trials totalling 674 bait nights
per bait type were conducted in southern Queensland to assess the relative attractiveness and palatability
of the two baits to wild dogs and non-target animals. Buried meat and surface-laid meat baits were also
compared to assess the effect that bait presentation can have on control programme efficiency and
non-target hazard. Fresh meat was found to be significantly more palatable to wild dogs than factory
baits. Factory baits, despite being equally attractive to wild dogs as fresh meat, had significantly more
visits by wild dogs where baits were not eaten. Fresh meat was significantly more attractive and
palatable to non-target species than factory baits. Buried baits were equally attractive and palatable
to wild dogs compared with surface-laid meat baits, yet had greatly reduced non-target bait take.
The significance of the results is discussed with regard to the potential 1080 hazard to birds and reptiles
(which removed 28% and 10% of baits, respectively) and the influence that non-target removal of
baits may have on the efficiency and design of wild-dog control programmes.
Extra keywords: Compound 1080, poison, SEA, sodium fluoroacetate.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
30 articles.
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