An assessment of seasonal bait uptake by individual grey squirrels to develop a delivery system for oral contraceptives

Author:

Beatham Sarah E.12ORCID,Stephens Philip A.2,Goodwin Dominic3,Coats Julia1,Thomas Erin1,Rochester Izzy1,Massei Giovanna4

Affiliation:

1. National Wildlife Management Centre, APHA York UK

2. Conservation Ecology Group, Department of Biosciences Durham University Durham UK

3. Biomotors Ltd. The Old Rectory Kent UK

4. Botstiber Institute for Wildlife Fertility Control, Department of Environment and Geography University of York York UK

Abstract

AbstractGlobally, human–wildlife conflicts continue to increase, owing to human population growth and expansion. Many of these conflicts concern the impacts of invasive non‐native species. In the UK, the invasive, non‐native grey squirrel Sciurus carolinensis negatively affects tree health and has caused the decline of the native red squirrel Sciurus vulgaris. Oral contraceptives are being developed to manage the impacts of the grey squirrel. To be effective, contraceptives will need to be deployed at a landscape scale, and will require a delivery system that is practical and economically viable. Understanding grey squirrel feeding behaviour is important so that delivery methods can be designed so that a sufficient number of target individuals receive an effective contraceptive dose at a time of year that will ensure their infertility throughout peak times of breeding. The main aims of this study were to assess how sex, season, squirrel density and bait point density influenced; (1) the probability of a squirrel visiting a feeder and (2) the amount of bait consumed from feeders. Field trials were conducted on six woodland populations of squirrels in three seasons, with four days of bait deployment via purpose‐designed squirrel‐specific bait hoppers with integrated PIT‐tag readers. It was possible to deliver multiple doses on most days to most male and female grey squirrels, with bait deployment more likely to be effective in spring, immediately before the second annual peak in squirrel breeding, followed by winter, immediately before the first peak in breeding. The results from this study could be used to design methods for delivering oral contraceptive baits to grey squirrels in the future and the methods used could be applied to other small mammal species and other bait delivery systems. © 2024 Crown copyright and The Author(s). Pest Management Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society of Chemical Industry. This article is published with the permission of the Controller of HMSO and the King's Printer for Scotland.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference47 articles.

1. International Union for Conservation of Nature Human‐wildlife conflict(2021). Retrieved fromhttps://www.iucn.org/resources/issues-brief/human-wildlife-conflict. Accessed 11th November2023.

2. Registration of wildlife contraceptives in the United States of America, with OvoControl and GonaCon immunocontraceptive vaccines as examples

3. Fertility Control for Wildlife: A European Perspective

4. Wildlife Contraception, Individuals, and Populations: How Much Fertility Control is Enough?

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