4.3 Article

Effects of brodifacoum on the land crab of Ascension island

Journal

JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT
Volume 64, Issue 2, Pages 380-387

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.2307/3803236

Keywords

Ascension Island; brodifacoum; Gecarcinus lagostoma; invertebrates; land crab; poisoning; rodenticides; tissue distribution

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Ascension island and its surrounding islets and seastacks form the most important breeding place for seabirds in the tropical Atlantic. As a result of human exploitation and introduced predators, -populations of most seabirds have undergone large-scale declines since the island's discovery; by humans hi 1501. Plans to restore Ascension's seabird colonies have included proposals to eradicate the introduced rats using island-wide application of the anticoagulant rodenticide brodifacoum. Assessment of the feasibility of rodent eradication on this scale requires careful evaluation of the potential non-target effects. We investigated the direct effects of brodifacoum upon the native land crab (Gecarcinus lagostoma), brodifacoum persistence and distribution in crab tissues, and the potential for secondary effects upon land crab scavengers and predators, including humans. Land crabs were fed Talon pellets (20P and 7-20, 0.002% brodifacoum) to simulate maximum exposure should an island-wide rodent eradication program take place. Crabs were kept caged in their natural environment for varying periods of time, and body parts were analyzed for brodifacoum residues. No crabs appeared to die as a result of exposure to brodifacoum. Whilst crabs readily ingested Talon pellets, only low concentrations of brodifacoum were found in their bodies after exposure (less than or equal to 0.129 ug/g wet body tissue). Brodifacoum uas not detected within crab claws at any time, and no residues were detected in any body tissues 1 month following exposure.

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