Biosecurity Research Articles

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

5-30-2025

Journal Title

Pacific Conservation Biology

ISSN

ISSN: 1038-2097, eISSN: 2204-4604

Keywords

agricultural, bait, biodiversity, feral cat, fox, management, predator, wild dog

Disciplines

Biosecurity | Other Animal Sciences

Abstract

Context

In Western Australia, there are three invasive predators that require management for agriculture and biodiversity protection, feral cats, wild dogs, and red foxes. These three predators often coexist in the same locality, suggesting potential efficacy gains can be made via simultaneous control. While Western Australian native species have evolved a high tolerance to poison baiting (1080), invasive predators have not. Therefore, landscape-scale baiting is commonly used for predator management. Aims

Eradicat baits designed for feral cat control have also been known to be consumed and control wild dogs and foxes. In this trial, we aimed to evaluate Eradicat as an all-predator bait, determine if there is a preferential time for the use of the bait and assess non-target impact(s) of baiting. Methods

We aimed to control all three predators on an agricultural property adjacent to a conservation reserve over 16 months with eight baiting events using Eradicat as an all-predator bait. Twenty one Reconyx camera traps monitored some of the baits deployed. Key results

A total of 300 baits had a known outcome with minimal uptake by all three predators. Many issues were encountered when working on a smaller-scale including interference with farming activities and management, flash flooding, and non-target uptake of the Eradicat baits. Wetter than anticipated environmental conditions likely increased alternate prey availability, negatively impacting bait uptake. Conclusions

More work is required to determine if Eradicat baits can be used as an all-predator bait.

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Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

https://doi.org/10.1071/PC25020