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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Abstract

House mice (Mus musculus; mice) are among the most widespread invasive species. On Gough Island (6,500 ha), mice preying on at least 19 bird species triggered a mouse eradication attempt. Gough Island is a volcanic island in the South Atlantic Ocean and part of Tristan da Cunha, a UK Overseas Territory. From June to August 2021, an expert team applied an anticoagulant rodenticide (active ingredient brodifacoum at a concentration 20 ppm) island-wide, predominantly via aerial broadcast using helicopters, as the island is mainly uninhabited. However, hand-baiting was also required because of the presence of a staffed meteorological station. The bait was hand broadcasted in and around buildings immediately after each of the 3 aerial applications in that area. Outdoor ground baiting covered the aerial exclusion zone (e.g., aviculture area, outside of buildings and surrounding shrubs; ~2 ha) using 8–10 kg ha–1 per application (i.e., matching aerial baiting rates), with kill-trapping for monitoring purposes occurring just prior to baiting (n = 123 traps). Baiting of buildings required bait to be placed under and inside all buildings, with 5 bait pellets placed in open trays (i.e., plastic petri dishes), and with at least 1 tray/room. Trays under buildings (n = 117) were set and baited the day after baiting first occurred outdoors. The following day, trays inside buildings (n = 135) were set and baited. Fresh bait was available under and inside buildings for 5 and 7 weeks, respectively. Trapping success was high (57%) the day before baiting began (June 12), and zero the following week and until baiting termination on August 12. Mice reappeared 6 months after the baiting operation began. However, this ground baiting approach may be useful for a future mouse eradication attempt at Gough Island or for similar projects.

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