Data from: Successful eradication of a suburban Pallas’s squirrel Callosciurus erythraeus (Pallas 1779) (Rodentia, Sciuridae) population in Flanders (northern Belgium)
Despite a growing catalogue of eradication projects, documented successful vertebrate eradications on the mainland remain scarce. Reporting on successful campaigns is crucial to counter pessimism on ambitious programmes to tackle invasive species and to allow conservation practitioners, wildlife man...
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Zusammenfassung: | Despite a growing catalogue of eradication projects, documented successful
vertebrate eradications on the mainland remain scarce. Reporting on
successful campaigns is crucial to counter pessimism on ambitious
programmes to tackle invasive species and to allow conservation
practitioners, wildlife managers and scientist to learn from previous
experience. Moreover, there is a need for basic information on the
effectiveness of control methods and management strategies that can be
used. In this note we report on a successful low-tech eradication campaign
of a local population of Pallas’s squirrel Callosciurus erythraeus, a
species of tree squirrel with documented ecological and socio-economic
impacts in its invasive range. The population was eradicated from a
suburban park of about 15 ha using baited mesh wire life traps, in five
consecutive capture campaigns between October 2005 and January 2011. Using
maximum likelihood estimation from catch-effort data we calculated initial
densities in the park at 3 squirrels ha−1. Although control started
quickly and the extent of the invasion was limited, the campaign took over
5 years and required an estimated investment of over €200,000 including
1.5 years of post-eradication surveying. We provide basic data on the
methods used to eradicate this invasive rodent. Critical success factors
and possible improvements with respect to the specific context of this
case are discussed. Adding this species to the list of species of EU
concern currently under development could provide incentive to minimise
impact of this tree squirrel at the continental scale. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.j0r60 |