Past and present concepts of rodent control at the 24 sugar plantations of Hawaii are reviewed with particular attention being given to the research efforts of the Experiment Station of the Hawaiian Sugar Planters Association in improving operational rodent control in sugarcane. Hawaii offers a unique set of conditions: a 2-year crop cycle, a production of over 100 tons of sugarcane per acre, countless numbers of gulches and wasteland bordering crop fields, and a year-long growing season, all having an effect on rat population and habitat
Invasive rodents (rats and mice) commonly occur on islands and often damage natural resources largel...
Roof rats (Rattus rattus) damage an estimated 5 to 10% of the developing nut crop in Hawaiian macada...
Current rodent control practices for the Hawaiian sugar industry revolve around the use of single gr...
Past and present concepts of rodent control at the 24 sugar plantations of Hawaii are reviewed with ...
Rattus norvegicus, R. exulans, and R. rattus cause extensive damage to Hawaiian sugarcane. This pape...
Rattus norvegicus, R. exulans, and R. rattus cause extensive damage to Hawaiian sugarcane. This pape...
Heavy losses In Hawaiian sugarcane are caused by Polynesian rats (Rattus exulans), Norway rats (R. n...
Heavy losses In Hawaiian sugarcane are caused by Polynesian rats (Rattus exulans), Norway rats (R. n...
The problem of rat damage done by Norway rats, black rats, and Polynesian rats to sugarcane in Hawai...
Rodent damage research in Hawaii has evolved in response to shifts from large-scale monoculture agri...
Current rodent control practices for the Hawaiian sugar industry revolve around the use of single gr...
The problem of rats in our Hawaiian sugar cane fields has been with us for a long time. Early recor...
Roof rats (Rattus rattus) damage an estimated 5-10% of the annual macadamia nut crop in Hawaii, resu...
Roof rats (Rattus rattus) damage an estimated 5-10% of the annual macadamia nut crop in Hawaii, resu...
The setting for a 10-year study of the ecology of the plague organism is described. Four rodents, M...
Invasive rodents (rats and mice) commonly occur on islands and often damage natural resources largel...
Roof rats (Rattus rattus) damage an estimated 5 to 10% of the developing nut crop in Hawaiian macada...
Current rodent control practices for the Hawaiian sugar industry revolve around the use of single gr...
Past and present concepts of rodent control at the 24 sugar plantations of Hawaii are reviewed with ...
Rattus norvegicus, R. exulans, and R. rattus cause extensive damage to Hawaiian sugarcane. This pape...
Rattus norvegicus, R. exulans, and R. rattus cause extensive damage to Hawaiian sugarcane. This pape...
Heavy losses In Hawaiian sugarcane are caused by Polynesian rats (Rattus exulans), Norway rats (R. n...
Heavy losses In Hawaiian sugarcane are caused by Polynesian rats (Rattus exulans), Norway rats (R. n...
The problem of rat damage done by Norway rats, black rats, and Polynesian rats to sugarcane in Hawai...
Rodent damage research in Hawaii has evolved in response to shifts from large-scale monoculture agri...
Current rodent control practices for the Hawaiian sugar industry revolve around the use of single gr...
The problem of rats in our Hawaiian sugar cane fields has been with us for a long time. Early recor...
Roof rats (Rattus rattus) damage an estimated 5-10% of the annual macadamia nut crop in Hawaii, resu...
Roof rats (Rattus rattus) damage an estimated 5-10% of the annual macadamia nut crop in Hawaii, resu...
The setting for a 10-year study of the ecology of the plague organism is described. Four rodents, M...
Invasive rodents (rats and mice) commonly occur on islands and often damage natural resources largel...
Roof rats (Rattus rattus) damage an estimated 5 to 10% of the developing nut crop in Hawaiian macada...
Current rodent control practices for the Hawaiian sugar industry revolve around the use of single gr...