Australia has 26 species of introduced pest mammals that cause extensive damage to agriculture and the conservation of native wildlife. Past efforts tried to eradicate them. This focus on reducing pest numbers rather than the outcome, reduced damage, has had limited success. Under its Vertebrate Pest Program, the Bureau of Resource Sciences has developed principles and a strategic approach to managing pest damage. Close cooperation with land managers as co-researchers and co-learners is an essential element, as is a coordinated group approach to pest management. The approaches are illustrated with an example
Vector-borne disease prevention and control strategies, aside from those associated with domestic ro...
Across the world, vertebrates cause considerable annual damage to agriculture, property, human healt...
Training in vertebrate pest management is in a parlous state worldwide. The level of retained corpo...
Australia has 26 species of introduced pest mammals that cause extensive damage to agriculture and t...
Principles contained in the 1993 publication “Managing Vertebrate Pests: Principles & Strategies...
Wildlife management has evolved through a series of stages, with early efforts directed toward indiv...
The impact of mammal pest animals, including the rabbit, fox, wild dog, feral pig, and feral goat, i...
The status of damage by vertebrate pests to growing and stored agricultural crops is reviewed in the...
Research on vertebrate pest control is mostly empirical, focusing on control of species X in locatio...
Vertebrate pest control deals with wild animals that create health hazards, damage resources, or bec...
Control of invasive vertebrate pests is likely to be needed in perpetuity unless their pest status c...
An in depth look at the principal requirements of an orderly and systematic approach to vertebrate p...
There are numerous wildlife damage problems in Australia. The major pests include rabbits (Oryctolag...
Vertebrate pest problems are foremost economic, political and social rather than biological anomalie...
Wildlife management has evolved through a series of stages, with early efforts directed toward indiv...
Vector-borne disease prevention and control strategies, aside from those associated with domestic ro...
Across the world, vertebrates cause considerable annual damage to agriculture, property, human healt...
Training in vertebrate pest management is in a parlous state worldwide. The level of retained corpo...
Australia has 26 species of introduced pest mammals that cause extensive damage to agriculture and t...
Principles contained in the 1993 publication “Managing Vertebrate Pests: Principles & Strategies...
Wildlife management has evolved through a series of stages, with early efforts directed toward indiv...
The impact of mammal pest animals, including the rabbit, fox, wild dog, feral pig, and feral goat, i...
The status of damage by vertebrate pests to growing and stored agricultural crops is reviewed in the...
Research on vertebrate pest control is mostly empirical, focusing on control of species X in locatio...
Vertebrate pest control deals with wild animals that create health hazards, damage resources, or bec...
Control of invasive vertebrate pests is likely to be needed in perpetuity unless their pest status c...
An in depth look at the principal requirements of an orderly and systematic approach to vertebrate p...
There are numerous wildlife damage problems in Australia. The major pests include rabbits (Oryctolag...
Vertebrate pest problems are foremost economic, political and social rather than biological anomalie...
Wildlife management has evolved through a series of stages, with early efforts directed toward indiv...
Vector-borne disease prevention and control strategies, aside from those associated with domestic ro...
Across the world, vertebrates cause considerable annual damage to agriculture, property, human healt...
Training in vertebrate pest management is in a parlous state worldwide. The level of retained corpo...