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Ecology, management and conservation in natural and modified habitats
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Effect of prefeeding on foraging patterns of brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula) about prefeed transects

B. Warburton A C , R. Clayton A , G. Nugent A , G. Graham B and G. Forrester A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Landcare Research, PO Box 40, Lincoln 7640, New Zealand.

B University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand.

C Corresponding author. Email: warburtonb@landcareresearch.co.nz

Wildlife Research 36(8) 659-665 https://doi.org/10.1071/WR09047
Submitted: 23 April 2009  Accepted: 12 October 2009   Published: 16 December 2009

Abstract

Context. Brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula) are a major pest of native biodiversity and agricultural production in New Zealand. To maximise the effectiveness of control operations, prefeeding (free-feeding) of non-toxic bait before poison is often used, but the mechanisms by which it does so, remain unclear. One possibility is that prefeeding changes foraging patterns and space use in ways that increase the likelihood of possums finding and eating a lethal dose of poison bait.

Aim. To determine whether prefeeding along transects increases possum activity on the transect, and if so, how long the effect lasts.

Methods. We monitored the time that radio-collared possums spent within a few metres of 350 m of aerial wire laid along a transect.

Key results. Initially, possums spent only 2.6 min per night in the vicinity of the wire, but after 20 kg of bait per kilometre were placed along the wire, that time increased 20-fold on the first night and remained high for the next four nights (by which time all of the bait had been consumed). After that there was a gradual decline in time spent near the wire over a further 18 days. The increased amount of time spent near the wire was the product of both an increase in the number of visits and the duration of those visits.

Conclusions. We conclude that sowing prefeed in concentrated strips is likely to greatly increase the probability of possums rapidly encountering toxic bait sown along the same strips, especially where the toxin can be sown immediately after all of the prefeed has been eaten.

Implications. Possum control operations can now be designed to apply much smaller quantities of toxic bait that will potentially reduce concerns about 1080 poisoning because of a move away from broadcast sowing operations that are intuitively disliked by many, to much more localised baiting regimes.


Acknowledgements

This work was conducted with approval from the Landcare Research Animal Ethics Committee (AEC 07/10/01), under Foundation of Research Science and Technology contract C09X0507, and contributes to the local elimination programme that is co-funded by the Animal Health Board (R-10669). The authors thank Dave Morgan, Grant Morris and Phil Cowan for their comments on earlier versions of this paper.


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