A soft-walled double-layered trap for capture of swamp wallabies Wallabia bicolor.
Stefano J Di , R Moyle and G Coulson
Australian Mammalogy 27(2) 235 - 238
Abstract
SINCE the development of soft-walled traps suitable
for the capture of small to medium-sized
macropodids (Kinnear et al. 1988; Pollock and
Montague 1991), traps of similar design have been
used to capture swamp wallabies (Wallabia bicolor)
by a number of workers (Wood 2002; Ben-Ami
2005; Paplinska 2005; B Parker, pers. comm.).
Although immobilising drugs delivered by syringe
darts have also been used to capture W. bicolor
successfully (Troy et al. 1992), this species is
difficult to dart relative to other similar sized
wallabies (Wood 2002), and once darted can be hard
to find within its often densely vegetated habitat
(Pollock and Montague 1991). The difficulty of
locating drugged animals in dense vegetation or steep
terrain also makes the use of bait laced with
diazepam or alpha chloralose (e.g., Norbury et al.
1994) impractical. Other capture techniques, such as
stunning and netting (e.g., Taggart et al. 2003) are
also rendered ineffective due to the habitat selected
by this species.
Full text doi:10.1071/AM05235
© CSIRO 2005





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