Abstract
This study tested the efficacy of secondary poisoning using Talon 20 P™
(20 ppm brodifacoum) in bait stations for killing predators in a New Zealand
podocarp forest. Nine of 10 resident radio-tagged stoats
(Mustela erminea) were killed after poisoning operations
that killed mice (Mus musculus), ship rats
(Rattus rattus) and brushtail possums
(Trichosurus vulpecula). Possums were an important
source of the poison, with six stoats dying 1–2 weeks after scavenging
on poisoned carcasses. New male stoats rapidly invaded the poisoned areas, but
few were killed because poisoned carcasses were scarce. Most resident stoats
died before possums were poisoned in other New Zealand trials when Talon 20 P
was hand-broadcast. Prey abundance is potentially an important determinant of
efficacy of the method, so pulse baiting is likely to be more successful than
press (sustained) baiting operations for controlling stoats. Use of bait
stations delayed indirect poisoning of stoats, but reduced risks to non-target
native species compared with hand-broadcast operations. Talon 20 P poisoning
operations using bait stations could be an especially useful way of restoring
New Zealand’s mainland communities of native biota because several
species of predators are killed in the same operation, but potential risks to
non-target native wildlife and humans should be intensively researched before
the method is routinely used. This research also demonstrates the potential
hazards of the new anticoagulant poisons like brodifacoum to conservation of
small native predators elsewhere.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
11 articles.
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