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Bait Preference of Free-Ranging Feral Swine for Delivery of a Novel Toxicant

Invasive feral swine (Sus scrofa) cause extensive damage to agricultural and wildlife resources throughout the United States. Development of sodium nitrite as a new, orally delivered toxicant is underway to provide an additional tool to curtail growth and expansion of feral swine populations. A micr...

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Autores principales: Snow, Nathan P., Halseth, Joseph M., Lavelle, Michael J., Hanson, Thomas E., Blass, Chad R., Foster, Justin A., Humphrys, Simon T., Staples, Linton D., Hewitt, David G., VerCauteren, Kurt C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4727921/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26812148
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146712
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author Snow, Nathan P.
Halseth, Joseph M.
Lavelle, Michael J.
Hanson, Thomas E.
Blass, Chad R.
Foster, Justin A.
Humphrys, Simon T.
Staples, Linton D.
Hewitt, David G.
VerCauteren, Kurt C.
author_facet Snow, Nathan P.
Halseth, Joseph M.
Lavelle, Michael J.
Hanson, Thomas E.
Blass, Chad R.
Foster, Justin A.
Humphrys, Simon T.
Staples, Linton D.
Hewitt, David G.
VerCauteren, Kurt C.
author_sort Snow, Nathan P.
collection PubMed
description Invasive feral swine (Sus scrofa) cause extensive damage to agricultural and wildlife resources throughout the United States. Development of sodium nitrite as a new, orally delivered toxicant is underway to provide an additional tool to curtail growth and expansion of feral swine populations. A micro-encapsulation coating around sodium nitrite is used to minimize detection by feral swine and maximize stability for the reactive molecule. To maximize uptake of this toxicant by feral swine, development a bait matrix is needed to 1) protect the micro-encapsulation coating so that sodium nitrite remains undetectable to feral swine, 2) achieve a high degree of acceptance by feral swine, and 3) be minimally appealing to non-target species. With these purposes, a field evaluation at 88 sites in south-central Texas was conducted using remote cameras to evaluate preferences by feral swine for several oil-based bait matrices including uncolored peanut paste, black-colored peanut paste, and peanut-based slurry mixed onto whole-kernel corn. These placebo baits were compared to a reference food, whole-kernel corn, known to be readily taken by feral swine (i.e., control). The amount of bait consumed by feral swine was also estimated using remote cameras and grid boards at 5 additional sites. On initial exposure, feral swine showed reduced visitations to the uncolored peanut paste and peanut slurry treatments. This reduced visitation subsided by the end of the treatment period, suggesting that feral swine needed time to accept these bait types. The black-colored peanut paste was visited equally to the control throughout the study, and enough of this matrix was consumed to deliver lethal doses of micro-encapsulated sodium nitrite to most feral swine during 1–2 feeding events. None of the treatment matrices reduced visitations by nontarget species, but feral swine dominated visitations for all matrices. It was concluded that black-colored peanut paste achieved satisfactory preference and consumption by feral swine, and no discernable preference by non-target species, compared to the other treatments.
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spelling pubmed-47279212016-02-03 Bait Preference of Free-Ranging Feral Swine for Delivery of a Novel Toxicant Snow, Nathan P. Halseth, Joseph M. Lavelle, Michael J. Hanson, Thomas E. Blass, Chad R. Foster, Justin A. Humphrys, Simon T. Staples, Linton D. Hewitt, David G. VerCauteren, Kurt C. PLoS One Research Article Invasive feral swine (Sus scrofa) cause extensive damage to agricultural and wildlife resources throughout the United States. Development of sodium nitrite as a new, orally delivered toxicant is underway to provide an additional tool to curtail growth and expansion of feral swine populations. A micro-encapsulation coating around sodium nitrite is used to minimize detection by feral swine and maximize stability for the reactive molecule. To maximize uptake of this toxicant by feral swine, development a bait matrix is needed to 1) protect the micro-encapsulation coating so that sodium nitrite remains undetectable to feral swine, 2) achieve a high degree of acceptance by feral swine, and 3) be minimally appealing to non-target species. With these purposes, a field evaluation at 88 sites in south-central Texas was conducted using remote cameras to evaluate preferences by feral swine for several oil-based bait matrices including uncolored peanut paste, black-colored peanut paste, and peanut-based slurry mixed onto whole-kernel corn. These placebo baits were compared to a reference food, whole-kernel corn, known to be readily taken by feral swine (i.e., control). The amount of bait consumed by feral swine was also estimated using remote cameras and grid boards at 5 additional sites. On initial exposure, feral swine showed reduced visitations to the uncolored peanut paste and peanut slurry treatments. This reduced visitation subsided by the end of the treatment period, suggesting that feral swine needed time to accept these bait types. The black-colored peanut paste was visited equally to the control throughout the study, and enough of this matrix was consumed to deliver lethal doses of micro-encapsulated sodium nitrite to most feral swine during 1–2 feeding events. None of the treatment matrices reduced visitations by nontarget species, but feral swine dominated visitations for all matrices. It was concluded that black-colored peanut paste achieved satisfactory preference and consumption by feral swine, and no discernable preference by non-target species, compared to the other treatments. Public Library of Science 2016-01-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4727921/ /pubmed/26812148 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146712 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Snow, Nathan P.
Halseth, Joseph M.
Lavelle, Michael J.
Hanson, Thomas E.
Blass, Chad R.
Foster, Justin A.
Humphrys, Simon T.
Staples, Linton D.
Hewitt, David G.
VerCauteren, Kurt C.
Bait Preference of Free-Ranging Feral Swine for Delivery of a Novel Toxicant
title Bait Preference of Free-Ranging Feral Swine for Delivery of a Novel Toxicant
title_full Bait Preference of Free-Ranging Feral Swine for Delivery of a Novel Toxicant
title_fullStr Bait Preference of Free-Ranging Feral Swine for Delivery of a Novel Toxicant
title_full_unstemmed Bait Preference of Free-Ranging Feral Swine for Delivery of a Novel Toxicant
title_short Bait Preference of Free-Ranging Feral Swine for Delivery of a Novel Toxicant
title_sort bait preference of free-ranging feral swine for delivery of a novel toxicant
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4727921/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26812148
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146712
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