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23 December 2013 Spatial prediction of brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula) distribution using a combination of remotely sensed and field-observed environmental data
Thibaud Porphyre, Joanna McKenzie, Andrea E. Byrom, Graham Nugent, James Shepherd, Ivor Yockney
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Context . In New Zealand, the introduced brushtail possum, Trichosurus vulpecula, is a reservoir of bovine tuberculosis and as such poses a major threat to the livestock industry. Aerial 1080 poisoning is an important tool for possum control but is expensive, creating an ongoing need for ever more cost-effective ways of using this technique.

Aims . To develop geographic information system (GIS) models to better predict spatial variation in the distribution of unmanaged possum populations, to facilitate better targeting of control activities.

Methods . Relative abundance of possums and their distribution among habitat types were surveyed in a dry high-country area of the northern South Island. Two GIS-based models were developed to predict the relative abundance of possums on trap lines. The first model used remotely sensed (digital) environmental data; the second complemented the remotely sensed data with fine-scale habitat and topographic data collected on the ground.

Key results . Digital environmental factors and habitat features proved to be key predictors of relative possum abundance. In both GIS models, height above valley floor, presence of forest cover and mean annual temperature were the strongest predictors.

Conclusions . Predictive maps (projections) of relative possum abundance produced from these models can provide useful decision-support tools for pest-control managers, by enabling possum control to be targeted spatially.

Implications . Spatially targeted pest control could allow effective control activities for invasive species or disease vectors to be applied at a lower cost for the same benefit.

© CSIRO 2013
Thibaud Porphyre, Joanna McKenzie, Andrea E. Byrom, Graham Nugent, James Shepherd, and Ivor Yockney "Spatial prediction of brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula) distribution using a combination of remotely sensed and field-observed environmental data," Wildlife Research 40(7), 578-587, (23 December 2013). https://doi.org/10.1071/WR13028
Received: 12 February 2013; Accepted: 1 November 2013; Published: 23 December 2013
KEYWORDS
disease management
invasive species
predictive map
relative abundance
spatial modeling
spatially targeted control
species distribution
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