Abstract
Captive trials were undertaken to determine whether tiger quolls and eastern
quolls could detect baits that were either buried or covered with soil
following the methods employed in normal buried-poisoned-bait programmes. Both
tiger quolls and eastern quolls detected, dug up and consumed buried FOXOFF
baits. Consumption trials showed that tiger quolls were capable of consuming
2–3 FOXOFF baits in a single meal and more than three baits overnight.
Eastern quolls could consume up to 1.5 baits in a single meal.
Field trials were undertaken to investigate whether tiger quolls in the wild
could also detect and consume buried baits. Trials with both fresh meat and
FOXOFF baits were undertaken at a site near a tiger quoll latrine, using a
remote camera to record visits to the site and bait uptake. The results
confirmed that tiger quolls in the wild can detect and consume both fresh meat
and FOXOFF baits that have been buried or placed on the surface and covered
with soil to a depth of 5–8 cm.
The results indicate that the buried-bait technique is not specific for
introduced predators, and free- feeding may not preclude non-target species
from taking buried baits. Reliance on the identification of the species
visiting bait stations from tracks may also be unreliable as foxes dug up bait
stations searching for baits, even after the bait had been removed,
potentially obliterating other tracks.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
32 articles.
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