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22 September 2020 Are red-tailed phascogales (Phascogale calura) at risk from Eradicat® cat baits?
J. Anthony Friend, Robert Hill, Brian Macmahon, Louisa Bell, Tim Button, Corey Mosen, Stephanie Hill
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Context Feral cats have benefitted from effective control of foxes in south-western Australia and, consequently, their impact on some threatened mammal species has increased. Control of feral cats in the region can be enhanced by use of the Eradicat® cat bait, but its impact on non-target animal populations requires investigation before widespread use.

Aims The aim of the present study was to determine through field trials whether consumption of Eradicat® baits by resident red-tailed phascogales, following a broadscale baiting operation to control feral cats, was sufficiently frequent to cause significant rates of mortality in wild populations of phascogales.

Methods Nine radio-tagged red-tailed phascogales were monitored through an Eradicat® baiting event to determine their survival. Removal and consumption of toxic and non-toxic rhodamine B-labelled baits by a range of species were monitored with camera traps and by subsequent trapping of red-tailed phascogales and other mammals to sample whiskers for evidence of rhodamine uptake.

Key results Although some phascogales showed interest in baits and sometimes moved them from the deposition site, all radio-tagged phascogales survived for at least 1 week after baiting, by which time very few or no baits remained. Examination of whiskers sampled from individuals exposed to rhodamine-labelled baits showed that consumption of non-toxic Eradicat® baits by phascogales was negligible; only one phascogale of 62 sampled showed any rhodamine banding.

Conclusions The present study provided no evidence that red-tailed phascogales in the study region are at risk from an Eradicat® baiting episode in autumn.

Implications The risk to red-tailed phascogale populations through the use of Eradicat® baiting to control cats in their habitat in the Great Southern region of Western Australia is likely to be low. Further research to elucidate any impact of repeated baiting on populations of this species at several locations is recommended.

© CSIRO 2020
J. Anthony Friend, Robert Hill, Brian Macmahon, Louisa Bell, Tim Button, Corey Mosen, and Stephanie Hill "Are red-tailed phascogales (Phascogale calura) at risk from Eradicat® cat baits?," Wildlife Research 47(7-8), 747-761, (22 September 2020). https://doi.org/10.1071/WR19087
Received: 18 May 2019; Accepted: 6 August 2020; Published: 22 September 2020
KEYWORDS
bait choice
conservation
introduced species
pest control
radio telemetry
wildlife management
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