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Behaviour of invasive ship rats, Rattus rattus, around Goodnature A24 self-resetting traps.

Authors :
Gronwald, Markus
Russell, James C.
Source :
Management of Biological Invasions. Oct2022, Vol. 13 Issue 3, p479-493. 15p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Invasive ship rats (Rattus rattus) are a major threat to the native species and ecosystems of islands. We used 10 self-resetting traps (A24 rat and stoat traps, Goodnature Ltd., Wellington, NZ), along with existing single kill DOC200 traps at two devices per hectare on a 9.3 hectare island in New Zealand to reduce rat numbers and ideally achieve eradication. Each self-resetting trap was monitored with motion-activated cameras to analyse rat behaviour and A24 kill numbers were documented using Goodnature digital strike counters. The traps were checked on 10 occasions from August 2016 to October 2017. The videos documented initial high rat activity on the island, which reduced over time following initial trapping success. An immediately obvious neophobic response towards the A24 traps was not observed. Rats interacted with the A24 traps within hours after initial deployment and 60% of the traps were triggered in the first night. After three nights, all traps were triggered at least once. While rats interacted with the traps at all times of the year the number of observed trap-triggers was relatively low. High number of interactions resulted in high kill numbers in late spring when population size was increasing and seasonal food abundance had not yet reached its peak. A second peak was observed in late autumn when rat abundance was presumably high. Recruitment of naïve individuals was a probable cause for high kill numbers during the breeding season. In winter, when rat abundance was presumably low, a few individuals were the likely cause for a high number of interactions while kill numbers were low. A knock-down (i.e. suppression from high to low abundance) of rats using both trap types was achieved in the first 100 days. However, kill numbers of A24s declined over time. After the initial suppression, the number of rats killed was insufficient to offset intrinsic population growth and reinvasion from the adjacent coast, thereby preventing eradication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19898649
Volume :
13
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Management of Biological Invasions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161372916
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3391/mbi.2022.13.3.02