This timeline explores the history and science of mammalian pest control in New Zealand. A full transcript is underneath the timeline.

1080 and pest control – a timeline

  • Introduced pest mammals
  • 1080 as pest control
  • Advances in science and technology

This timeline traces the introduction of pest mammal species to New Zealand, the use of 1080 for pest control and how advances in science and technology have improved how we use it.

Introduced pest mammals

Early settlers brought animals to New Zealand for food, fur, sport and sometimes by accident. In the absence of natural predators, many of these mammals became pest species that impact native ecosystems and kill native species.

1080 as pest control

1080 is a poison that targets mammals. It is the most regulated form of pest control in New Zealand.

Advances in science and technology

Decades of research have improved our understanding of 1080’s environmental impacts. Technological advances have increased the safety, efficiency and precision of 1080 operations. New technologies also provide targeted and more humane means of pest control.

Transcript

Introduced pest mammals

1250 – Kiore and kurī

Kiore (Pacific rats) and kurī (dogs) arrive in the canoes of the first Polynesian explorers. Kiore contribute to the extinction or reduction of several native species including giant wētā, snails and the New Zealand snipe.

1772 – Norway rats

Norway rats arrive on the ships of some of the first European explorers. The rats quickly disperse and spread.

Image courtesy of Ngā Manu Images

1773 – Cats

James Cook’s ship cat is the first cat to kill native birds.

1837 – Brushtail possums

The Australian brushtail possum is deliberately introduced to establish a fur trade, but efforts are unsuccessful.

Image licensed through 123RF Limited

1838 – Rabbits

Rabbits are introduced for food and sport.

1851 – Hares

Hares are introduced to Canterbury for food and sport.

1851 – Red deer

The first of about 1,000 British red deer are released in the South Island for game hunting.

1858 – Southland possums

Possums are successfully established in Southland in order to establish a fur trade.

1860 – Ship rats

Introduced during earlier visits, ship rats are now established across New Zealand.

Image: Comparison of rat species in New Zealand. From left to right – Norway rat, ship rat, kiore and house mouse.

Photograph by Jason Froggatt, courtesy Auckland War-Memorial Museum.

1863 – Red deer

Red deer are released into the North Island.

1870 – Hedgehogs

The European hedgehog is introduced to eat slugs, snails and grubs.

Image of European Hedgehog, Erinaceus europaeus, collected 1 December 1932, Taita, Wellington, New Zealand. Gift of Frederick Westbury, 1933. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Te Papa (LM001417)

1879 – Ferrets

Ferrets are introduced to control rabbits and hares. They immediately spread into the bush.

1884 – Stoats

Stoats are introduced to control rabbits and hares. Scientists, including ornithologist Walter Butler, warn of the danger to native birds.

Image courtesy of Ngā Manu Images

1894 – Hedgehogs exchanged for weka

Christchurch man imports 12 hedgehogs in exchange for 12 weka. The hedgehogs escape on their first night ashore.

1905 – Wapiti gifted

US President Theodore Roosevelt gives wapiti deer as a gift to the country. They are released in Fiordland.

1910 – Impact of deer

Large herds are reported to be overgrazing pasture and native forests, causing erosion and flooding.

Image: Red deer in a paddock in the Wairarapa. Ref: 1/2-000268-G. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. /records/23081433

1930 – Possums spread

Possums have now been released in 450 locations around the country.

A rare image of a rat and a possum taking chicks from a nest, courtesy of Ngā Manu Images.

1930 – Deer menace

The Deer Menace Conference takes place in Christchurch. Government deer culling begins soon after.

Image: Deer hunters camp at Camerons Flat, and antlers. Ref: PAColl-6208-41. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. /records/22729288

1946 – Possums declared pests

Possums are classified as pests because of the damage they cause in native forests. All protections are removed.

Image: Two possum trappers with a day’s catch from the Lake Waikaremoana district. Ref: PAColl-8983-05. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. /records/22833760

1951 – Possum bounty scheme

A bounty scheme runs for 10 years – 8 million possums are trapped and killed, mostly from accessible locations.

1964 – Big South Cape Island/Taukihepa

Ship rats are accidentally introduced on Big South Cape Island/Taukihepa (off Rakiura/Stewart Island) and quickly wipe out seven native species including birds, a bat and an insect. Other species are impacted but not eliminated.

Learn more in Big South Cape: an invasion, a rescue and an eradication.

Image of damage by ship rats to the Waitiri family muttonbird hut on Big South Cape Island/Taukihepa, April 1964.

Photo copyright of Brian Bell and sourced from The legacy of Big South Cape: Rat irruption to rat eradication. Elizabeth Bell, Brian D. Bell and Don V. Merton. January 2016. New Zealand Journal of Ecology, 40(2): 212–218.

1993 – Video evidence

Video shows possums eating kōkako eggs and chicks. Prior to this, possums were assumed to be vegetarian.

Image courtesy of Ngā Manu Images.

2012 – Tahr damage

Department of Conservation photos reveal grazing impacts of tahr on native vegetation.

Image is of Zora Creek, Landsborough, before tahr impacts 2003 (left) and after tahr impacts 2012.

Department of Conservation, CC BY 4.0

2017 – Sika deer released

Sika deer are illegally released into north Taranaki conservation forest. Wild deer are major pests on public conservation lands.

1080 as pest control

1080 is a poison that targets mammals. It is the most regulated form of pest control in New Zealand.

1927 – Monofluoroacetate patented

Monofluoroacetate is patented in Germany as an insecticide/moth repellent. (At this time, the chemical naming protocol requires the first element of a compound to be numbered. There is one sodium atom in the compound, so it is called monofluoroacetate. The protocol has since changed, so mono is no longer used.)

1944 – 1080 ‘named’

US Fish and Wildlife Service refers to fluoroacetate by its laboratory catalogue number – 1080. It is first used in the US as a rodenticide to control rats and mice and later used to control coyotes and other predatory mammals on government-owned land.

1954 – New Zealand trials

New Zealand tests the efficacy of 1080 for mammalian pest control using both ground-based and aerial applications. Its usage becomes widespread by 1957. Small amounts of 1080 are added to a variety of baits including cereal pellets, chopped carrot and gel baits.

Image: Bagging carrots in 1957 for use with 1080 bait.

Evening Post (Newspaper. 1865-2002): Photographic negatives and prints of the Evening Post newspaper. Ref: EP/1957/2393-F. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. /records/22621780

1961 – Use in South Africa

1080 is used in South Africa to target jackals, moles and baboons.

1972 – United States cancels the use of 1080

Lawsuits prompt the US Government to review the use of toxins to control predators on government-owned land. As a result, the Environmental Protection Agency cancels the registration of 1080, sodium cyanide, strychnine and thallium sulfate.

1979 – Reduced funding for TB possum control

Curbing possum numbers for TB control is initially very successful, so funding and operations are reduced. As a result of reduced control, areas where wild animals have bovine TB increase from 8 to 15. Infected herd numbers rise to pre-control levels.

1985 – United States reinstates 1080 use

The US Environmental Protection Agency registers 1080 for use in livestock protection collars. The collar has a pouch of 1080 solution, which ruptures when a coyote attempts to kill a sheep or goat by biting its throat. Only coyotes that attack livestock are killed.

2003 – Managing the spread of bovine TB

Over 300 New Zealand cattle herds are infected with bovine TB. By 2015, the number is reduced to less than 50 herds.

Image: A fatal curiosity; how TB could spread from an infected possum (with pus on its fur) to cattle. Graham Nugent, Manaaki Whenua – Landcare Research, CC-BY 4.0

2005 – Wallaby cull

Tasmania uses 1080 to kill 200,000 wallabies on King Island.

2007 – New Zealand horse deaths

An aerial 1080 drop near Tūrangi leaves four horses dead and three sick when the operator fails to advise the owner to move the horses.

2008 – Carrot baits stopped

New Zealand’s Department of Conservation stops using carrot baits. Although dyed bright green, they are still attractive to some non-target species like kākā.

Image courtesy of the Department of Conservation

2011 – Red fox eradication

Tasmania uses 1080 to eradicate red foxes from the state.

2011 – Whio success

Whio (blue duck) fledgling numbers triple after aerial and ground control operations in Tongariro National Park in the central North Island.

Image courtesy of Bubs Smith

2014 – Large beech mast

Large beech seed events in the South Island lead to a boom in pest numbers. Increased aerial 1080 drops are effective in stopping rat plagues.

2014 – Kea deaths

The Department of Conservation reports that 24 radio-tagged kea died as a result of aerial operations between 2008 and 2014. Kea deaths are confined to just six of the pest control sites. Experts think kea that are exposed to human activity and food are at greater risk of poisoning as they are more likely to try new foods.

2015 – Kōkako success

The kōkako population in the Mangatutu Ecological Area (south of Hamilton) grows by 700% after four 1080 drops over 16 years.

Image: North Island kōkako (Callaeas wilsoni), Matt Binns, CC BY 2.0

2016 – No kea deaths

In the 2016 Battle for our Birds aerial operations, no kea deaths are reported.

2018 – Cattle deaths

Eight cattle die after entering a 1080 operational area via a broken fence.

Advances in science and technology

1896 – Monofluroacetate synthesised

Belgian chemist Frédéric Swarts first synthesises monofluoroacetate in the lab.

Image: Frédéric Swarts with other attendees at the Solvay Conference on Chemistry in 1922. Public domain.

1967 – Bovine tuberculosis

A vet makes the link between bovine tuberculosis and possums. Research confirms the link in 1971. Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease that affects the lungs and airways.

1983 – Cinnamon oil

Cinnamon oil is added to baits. The smell is offensive to birds but attractive to possums.

1989 – GPS navigation

The first GPS navigation systems guide aerial fertiliser applications. 1080 operators are quick to adopt the technology.

Image: petervick16, licensed through 123RF Ltd.

1993 – Continued bait research

Using non-toxic baits, research finds that some bird species still sample green cinnamon baits.

1993 – Tree wētā study

In a lab study, tree wētā fed doses of 1080 survive, with 67% of the toxin being excreted within hours.

Image courtesy of Andy Heyward, licensed through 123RF Ltd.

1993 – Biocontrol options

A paper in the New Zealand Journal of Zoology outlines several options to biologically control possums, including using parasitic worms, hormone-toxins and vaccines.

Image: University of Waikato Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato

1993 – Lower bait concentration

Research shows that less bait is needed. The concentration drops from 20 kg bait/ha down to 5 kg bait/ha and eventually to 2–3 kg bait/ha.

1998 – Bait pre-feeding

Non-toxic pre-feeds are now standard practice. Eating safe, pleasant-tasting baits encourages rats and possums to seek out the poisoned baits when they are dropped.

Diagram of pre-feeding benefits courtesy of 1080 Facts.

1999 – Blue dye added

Trials show most bird species do not eat blue food items but possums do. Blue dye is added to green baits.

2002 – Bait flow sensors

Sensors and video recordings help aerial operators to achieve more evenly spread bait coverage.

2004 – Aquatic creatures

NIWA scientists place 10 times the usual 1080 concentration in a stream. Samplings show no biological impacts to aquatic organisms.

2005 – Soil organisms

Landcare Research scientists expose a range of soil organisms to doses of 1080. Any 1080-related effects happen at levels well above those measured in soil following a 1080 operation.

Image of tiger worm (Eisenia fetida) and cocoon courtesy of Andreas Thomsen CC 3.0

2005 – Drinking water

New Zealand’s Ministry of Health adopts water standards, with a provisional maximum acceptable value (PMVA) of 3.5 ppb 1080 but recommends drinking water be less than 2 ppb.

Image: University of Waikato Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato

2005 – ERMA reassessment

New Zealand’s Environmental Risk Management Authority judges that the benefits of 1080 outweigh adverse effects but recommends tighter controls.

2009 – SowLow bucket

A new 1080 bait bucket delivery design increases the effectiveness of aerial operations.

Morgan, David. (2015). Maximising the effectiveness of aerial 1080 control of possums (Trichosurus vulpecula). 10.13140/2.1.3354.9607.

2010 – Biocontrol research finishes

Research into possum contraceptive vaccines and hormone toxin projects ends. Much has been learned about possum reproduction, but practical control methods have not been achieved.

2010 – Self-resetting traps

Conservation groups trial self-resetting traps and provide feedback to refine the traps and lures. The aim is to reduce the need for people to check and reset traps between kills.

IMAGE: Goodnature trap, Annie Dick, CC BY-SA 4.0

2011 – PCE report

Dr Jan Wright, Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment, releases a report evaluating the use of 1080. She says it is effective and safe and New Zealand should use more of it.

2014 – Biological Heritage NSC

Launch of New Zealand’s Biological Heritage Ngā Koiora Tuku Iho National Science Challenge. Research will cover biosecurity and management.

Logo courtesy of New Zealand’s Biological Heritage National Science Challenge

2016 – Predator-free launch

The government adopts the goal of becoming predator-free by 2050.

2017 – Gene editing

The Royal Society Te Apārangi releases documents exploring the use of gene editing for pest control of possums, rats and stoats.

Image courtesy of Royal Society Te Apārangi

Rights: The University of Waikato Te Whare Wananga o Waikato Published 26 November 2018 Referencing Hub media
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