Killing in the name of conservation

Posted In: Environment

By EurekAlert

Monday, February 22, 2010


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Thanks to the introduction of various non-native species to Australia throughout history, the country is overrun with feral animals. A new application developed by ecologists at the University of Adelaide to be published in the first issue of Methods in Ecology and Evolution, the new journal from the British Ecological Society, aims to improve the success of wildlife managers tasked with eradicating such problems.

Often, strategies employed by government and wildlife managers can be at best controversial, such as the recent internationally reported plans to cull vast numbers of feral camels, and at worst a catalyst for an even bigger problem. This was witnessed on Macquarie Island, where the eradication of wild cats led to a ten-fold increase in the rabbit population, likely to cost $24 million to resolve. A research study highlighting this latter example was published last year in the British Ecological Society's Journal of Applied Ecology.

Now, a paper published in the inaugural issue of the British Ecological Society's new journal, Methods in Ecology and Evolution, aims to help wildlife managers plan any culling strategies more effectively by modelling the financial and population impact of their planned strategy using a spreadsheet-based application which the authors have made available online.

"Unfortunately, a lot of money tends to be wasted in Australia on reducing the damage that feral species cause," said co-author Corey Bradshaw from the University of Adelaide. "This is because density reduction culling programmes aren't usually done with much forethought, organisation or associated research.

Our Excel-spreadsheet 'Spatio-Temporal Animal Reduction' (S.T.A.R.) model is designed specifically to optimise the culling strategies for feral pigs, buffalo and horses in Kakadu National Park (northern Australia), but our aim was to make it easy enough for anyone to use and modify it so that it could be applied to any invasive species anywhere.

Our hope is that wildlife managers responsible for safeguarding the biodiversity of places like Kakadu National Park actually use this tool to maximise their efficiency."

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1 Comments

  • The comment in this article that "This was witnessed on Macquarie Island, where the eradication of wild cats led to a ten-fold increase in the rabbit population, likely to cost $24 million to resolve" demonstrates a very limited understanding of the situation on Macquarie Island and the planned eradication program.
    Removal of feral cats on the island has had direct benefits for the island's native species, for example populations of Antarctic prions and other burrowning petrels have increased in the absence of cats, and grey petrels bred in 2000 for the first time in over a century.
    The increase in rabbit numbers on the island is a result of several factors, not simply the removal of cats. Myxomatosis was used to control rabbit numbers on the island for a number of years, however its effectiveness has gradually reduced. The virus is no longer available.
    Cats were never considered to have controlled rodent numbers (or indeed rabbit numbers)and much of the quoted cost is required to implement an eradication campaign targeting rodents, so it is patently incorrect to claim that $24M is required as a result of cat eradication.
    The eradication project on Macquarie Island will see the removal of three invasive species at one time; rabbits, rats and mice. It will cost $24 million and the long term benefits will be immense for this World Heritage Area.
    Keith Springer
    Project Manager, Macquarie Island Pest Eradication Project.

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