Author:
Kirkpatrick Jay F.,Turner Allison
Abstract
The ultimate goal of any wildlife contraceptive effort is some alteration of the target population, either through a slowing of growth, or stabilisation or reduction of the population. Early population models suggested that short-term contraceptive agents applied to long-lived species would not achieve significant population changes. Native porcine zona pellucida antigen (PZP), a short-term contraceptive vaccine, was applied to a herd of wild horses inhabiting Assateague Island National Seashore, MD, USA, over a 13-year period, with an immediate goal of achieving zero population growth, a secondary goal of reducing the population from 175 to 150 and a tertiary goal of reaching 120 individuals, all without the physical removal of animals. Contraceptive efficacy ranged from 92 to 100% on an annual basis (96.28 ± 2.49%), and the percentage of adult females that was treated on any given year ranged from 42 to 76% (67.78 ± 18.21%). The goal of zero population growth was achieved in 2 years, an initial decline in the population became apparent in 8 years and by Year 11, the population declined to 135, a decrease of 22.8%. The lengthy period required for achieving a population decline was caused by increasing body condition scores, reduced mortality and significantly increased longevity among treated females.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
44 articles.
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