Showing posts with label Brown tree snake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brown tree snake. Show all posts

Monday, 7 August 2017

Drug-laced mice to be used to combat brown tree snake in Guam - via Herp Digest

Pacific Daily News, 7/30/17, by John I. Borjam, 

(Editor of HD- Article is an update on the continued efforts to eradicate the Brown Tree Snake. I believe a 40 plus years battle.).

Once fiscal 2018 kicks in later this year, more drug-laced dead mice will be falling from the skies in an effort to curb the population of brown tree snakes.

Recently, the U.S. Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services tested its aerial bait drop system in Guam’s jungles. The program involves air-dropping dead mice filled with acetaminophen, a pain reliever found in medicine like Tylenol, to attract and kill snakes. Streamers attached to the mice get caught in tree branches, suspending the mice where snakes live.

Robert Gosnell, Guam Wildlife Services state director, said the experimentation is complete and the agency is waiting until fiscal 2018, which begins Oct. 1, to begin operations. Education outreach and more information to the public will be available before the mice are dropped, Gosnell said.

The invasive brown tree snake has been responsible for islandwide power outages and the depletion of many of Guam's birds. Gosnell said current control efforts have at least stagnated the population.

“It varies with the seasons, but we believe the population is decreasing slightly because of how many snakes we capture each year,” Gosnell said. He estimates between 12,000 and 15,000 brown tree snakes are caught on Guam annually.

Gosnell and his team of 74 employees use methods such as traps, bait tubes and canine teams to track down the snakes. Groups from the U.S. Geological Survey, Department of Defense and the Division of Aquatics and Wildlife Resources also participate in the captures.

“We always have ongoing research, for example looking at methods of artificial baits versus live baits,” Gosnell said. “There’s about 15 to 20 research projects going on right now for the snake.”

The Department of the Interior is making more money available to help U.S. territories fight invasive species populations.

More than $3.5 million in fiscal 2017 federal funds was set aside to reduce the population of brown tree snakes on Guam.

According to DOI, the funding will go towards the program, as well as additional research, assessments and rapid response training in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, other Micronesian islands and Hawaii.

Monday, 14 May 2012

Battling the brown tree snake in Guam


In the dense tropical forest, a slither of movement can just be made out in the glow of our head torches.
A snake is entwined in the undergrowth. It is about 1m long, mostly dull brown but with a vivid yellow underbelly.
We are face to face with Guam's "nemesis": the brown tree snake. And the forests here are dripping with them.
The US territory, in the western Pacific, is only 50km (30 miles) long and 10km wide, but it is packed with two million snakes.
This reptile arrived here only 60 years ago but has rapidly become one of the most successful invasive species ever.
Unhealthy appetite
Wildlife biologist James Stanford, from the US Geological Survey, says: "Our belief is that they came at the end of World War II.
"We've looked at their genetics and they are all extremely closely related, and it appears they came from the Island of Manus in Papua New Guinea."
He explains that military equipment used by the US in Papua New Guinea while the war raged in the Pacific was eventually sent back to Guam to be processed. A snake probably crept on to a ship or a plane destined for the island.

Monday, 23 April 2012

Spider eats snake - caught on camera


WHAT do you do when you walk into the backyard and discover a giant spider eating an even bigger snake?
If you're Ant Hadleigh, you go straight for your camera.
The Cairns resident caught a series of incredible snaps after walking into his mate's backyard to see the golden orb spider slowly devouring a brown tree snake yesterday.

"I thought it was pretty incredible," Mr Hadleigh told The Cairns Post.

"A few times the snake managed to get up and attack the spider, and the spider would run back up the web.

"I would have put my money on the snake for sure, especially seeing how big it was."

Read more about the snake-eating spider and see more pictures at cairns.com.au

Sunday, 13 March 2011

Flying Mice Target Tree Snakes (Via Herp Digest)

Flying Mice Target Tree Snakes-Officials combat Guam's invasive brown tree snakes by dropping poisoned bait from helicopters
By Sabrina Richards, 3/3/11

For years, Guam's skies have been nearly empty. The brown tree snake, an invasive reptile that snuck onto the island in the cargo of Navy airplanes shortly after World War II, decimated most bird species decades ago. But last September the sky was not vacant: it was raining mice.

Navy helicopters criss-crossed Guam's jungle as mice were shot from specially-designed contraptions, all in the latest strategy to beat back the brown tree snake and allow the reintroduction of native bird species. Dead before ejection, the rodents act as tiny Trojan horses tossed into the jungle canopy. Inside their tasty exteriors scientists slip acetaminophen - Tylenol's active ingredient also poisons these tree snakes. This strategy is the culmination of years of research by the United States Department of Agriculture.

"No one else is doing this," says William Pitt of the USDA, who headed the research team tasked with devising the technique to scatter poisonous snake bait over Guam's jungle.

A major goal of Guam's snake control program is keeping the snakes from hopscotching to other islands and wreaking similar havoc on equally vulnerable ecosystems like Saipan's or Hawai'i's. Currently, trained dogs sniff outgoing cargo to head off any sneaky snakes attempting to catch a free ride on Navy planes leaving Andersen Military Base. When a snake is sighted on neighboring islands, the U.S. Geological Survey's Brown Tree Snake Rapid Response Team flies in to help local authorities capture it and determine whether there's a burgeoning snake population.

While the diversity of species on other Pacific islands attests to the success of these measures, they are labor intensive. Most snake control happens at specific locations, like the cargo holds of airplanes or along the fences encircling the military base. This means snakes that remain in the jungle mostly slither free. Scattering mice over the forest would be much easier and quicker than slogging through the forest baiting and checking traps - the snakes would essentially get rid of themselves.

The new method takes advantage of their location and basic biology: acetaminophen is poisonous to the snakes. The mice are stuffed with just 80 milligrams of acetaminophen - equal to a child's dose of Tylenol - then glued to cardboard strips. Paper streamers tangle in the small branches after the mouse bundles are catapulted from helicopters. "The whole idea is that they get caught in the canopy," where only the snakes go, says Pitt.

Brown trees snakes have dominated Guam's treetops since shortly after their arrival in the 1940s, fundamentally altering the forests. "It's eerie. It's very, very quiet," says Robert Reed, a wildlife biologist with the geological survey, who works to combat brown tree snakes but was not involved with the latest aerial drop. Only a few birds remain near Anderson Air Force base, where stringent controls keep snake numbers down.

After laying waste to the birds, the snakes went after the rodents. Reed estimates that the rodent population on Guam is ten times lower than on nearby islands where the snake has not spread. The brown tree snake's ability to persist after overwhelming its prey populations is one key to its insidious success. Rodents are rare and the birds are gone, but the snakes slither on. As Reed explains, "The snakes are just marvelously good at taking a small amount of resources in the form of prey and turning it into more snakes."

But lobbing tasty toxic treats at the snakes will not eradicate them, Pitt says-there are far too many to poison them all. He explains that the goal is to create snake-free areas where bird species can be reintroduced. One possible bird is the Guam rail, a small flightless bird (not unlike a kiwi in looks) that is being successfully bred in zoos worldwide. Reed is optimistic. "It's a promising technique," he says. "Maybe we'll be able to restore some native species on Guam some time in the near future."

Data is already being gleaned from the aerial mouse drop. It is imperative, Pitt explains, that the poisonous mice only target brown tree snakes because the snakes are not the only scavengers on Guam. To make sure the mice aren't going to waste, researchers glued radio transmitters to the bellies of some mice, so they can follow the signals to see whether the bait ends up in the bellies of snakes, or innocuous species like coconut crabs.

Another advantage of the aerial baiting technique is its potential for targeting large numbers of snakes at minimal cost. "People think of the helicopters as being really expensive," says Reed, "But the alternative is to have human employees walking around and checking traps or checking bait stations all over the island" - a more costly alternative.

Haldre Rogers, a botanist at the University of Washington in Seattle, is studying the indirect effects of brown tree snakes on forest diversity. Many tree species need birds to disperse seeds to new areas and help speed their germination. In neighboring islands like Saipan, seeds travel far from their parent trees. In Guam, she says, seeds fall straight to the ground. Rogers predicts that Guam's current forest of intermingling species will decline, as these seeds grow into clumps of the same species of tree.

Next up for the new technique: automation. Putting together the mouse baits is currently a time-consuming process, requiring human volunteers wielding hot glue guns, says Pitt. Wide-scale drops won't become feasible until the entire process, from bait assembly to expulsion from helicopters, is mechanized.

Meanwhile, Rogers says, the aerial drop is "a good tool to have in the arsenal." Occasionally, she encounters a rare starling near one of the military bases, when it breaks into song.

In the hushed forest, the sound, she says, is "shocking."

Wednesday, 13 October 2010

Poisoned Mice Bombing Hopes to Halt Guam Snake Advance (Via Herp Digest)

Poisoned Mice Bombing Hopes to Halt Guam Snake Advance
September 20, 2010 ABC Radio Australia
http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/pacbeat/stories/201009/s3016098.htm
On above URL you will be able to listen to story. The following is the full transcript of the story.

Authorities in Guam are taking their battle against its infestation of brown tree snakes to the skies with the US Department of Agriculture dropping dead mice packed with poisonous chemicals onto forests to provide deadly snacks for the snakes.

It also supplements current trapping systems designed to prevent the snakes from hitching a ride on boats and aircraft to other Pacific islands. 

The species have already wiped out the island's entire native population of forest birds since being accidentally introduced to Guam over half a century ago. They also generate millions of dollars in damage after getting entangled in electric wires causing power shortages. 

Authorities hope the poison laced mice would help put an end to an ecological and economic nightmare.

Presenter: Geraldine Coutts
Speaker: Dan Vice, assistant state director of the US Department of Agriculture's Wildlife Services in the Pacific

VICE: We've been working for years in a large cooperative effort to try to prevent the snake from spreading around the region and at the same time try to mitigate the impact of the snake on Guam and we have done that with a variety of very labour intensive tools, trapping and capturing and the use of detector dogs and such. In the last five years, we have received the official go ahead from the US Environmental Protection Agency to use an oral toxicant, a pseudomenaphin which is a common compound used for pain and fever reduction as a poison for brown tree snakes and we are working on developing the technology to actually deliver this toxic aerially so we can start doing snake control across larger more difficult to access blocks of terrain where snake populations are quite large on Guam.


COUTTS: Including in this particular part of the program now, dead mice laced with this drug or this poison and chucking them out of planes?


VICE: Right, it is a little more scientific approach to that, but yes we use a dead juvenile mice that we then insert 80 milligrams of pseudomenaphin into the body and then attach the mouse to a flotation system, so that when it's distributed out of a helicopter it will float relatively slowly to the ground and actually hang up in the forest canopy. What we want to do is keep the bait from hitting the ground, actually keep them in the tree so that the snake which lives in the trees will be virtually the only thing that can get to that bait.


COUTTS: And how far into the program are you, can you know how successful it is yet?


VICE: Well, we know the bait is very effective at killing snakes. Eighty milligrams is 100 per cent lethal to every size of brown tree snakes that eats it. We know that we can deliver the bait and get it to hang up the forest and we actually do some novel work with this where we're putting radio transmitters in some of the baits. When we drop them, we can go out and find them in the forest and then we can track them and we can determine what actually happens to them. And during this most recent pilot project we started, we put I think ten radios on the ground and we had snakes consume a number of those baits. So we know we can put bait out into the forest. We know the snakes will consume it, we know the snakes will die when they eat it, so we definitely have a useful tool here.


COUTTS: So the tracking is to know their habits. So you know how to get rid of them more easily?


VICE: Well really, the tracking is so that we know what the fate of the baits are. We want to make certain that when we're putting those baits out into the forest, that they are doing what we expect them to do and that's get consumed by and ultimately kill a brown tree snake and so we can actually document that snake has eaten the bait and we can got out and recover the snake after it has eaten it.


COUTTS: And how successful have you targeted the canopies of the trees, because presumably you don't want to hit the ground to wipe out other insects and animals that you're not targeting?


VICE: Right, there is a couple of reasons to put it into canopy. One if for non-target concerns, but number two, is to just make it more accessible to the snakes. If it hits the ground and falls in a crack on the ground in rocks or something like that, then the snakes just don't find it. So by putting these flotation systems together, we are able to get about 90 per cent of the baits to hang up in the forest canopy which is really important for us.


COUTTS: How do you maintain your supply of mice? You say they are juvenile mice. Are you breeding them specifically for this program?


VICE: Right, there are actually companies around the world that are in the business of raising mice for using them for like zoos, endangered species, propagation projects and stuff, animals that require food. People raise mice and they sell them as food for captive animals and we're using those companies to help supply us. Ultimately, we would like to be able find something other than mouse though, because they don't last very long in the field, about three days and they begin to degrade and they are no longer useful for the snakes. We'd like to find something inanimate that we could use that would be more persist in the environment and still get snakes to eat it. Unfortunately, we've had a lot of research that has gone into it and there's just nothing that seems to anywhere approach the effectiveness of the mouse.


COUTTS: And do you know how many mice have been parachuted out of the helicopters now as part of this program?


VICE: Just this first pilot project we did about 250 baits or so. It was a very small scale test of our system. We're anticipating moving this project forward in the coming years and so we were out testing our navigation system and testing the bait delivery and all of the things that we need to do to make sure that the system works before we go on a larger scale.


COUTTS: Okay, and is this a program that you are doing by yourselves and getting help from elsewhere?

VICE: The project is actually funded by the US Department of Defence Technological Certification Program. We're doing the work in collaboration with a number of different partners, including our National Wildlife Research Centre out of Fort Collins, Colorado and the local military commands on Guam are providing logistic support and access to property to actually do the project, so it would not be successful without the help of all of those partners.
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