1 / 20

Integrated Wildlife Damage Management For Homeowners

Integrated Wildlife Damage Management For Homeowners Thomas G. Barnes, Ph.D, Extension Professor What is Wildlife Damage Management?

johana
Download Presentation

Integrated Wildlife Damage Management For Homeowners

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Integrated Wildlife Damage Management For Homeowners Thomas G. Barnes, Ph.D, Extension Professor

  2. What is Wildlife Damage Management? • Wildlife damage management is an activity that seeks to balance the needs of human activity with the needs of wildlife to the mutual enhancement of both. Sometimes the solution to an animal-human conflict requires the human to change his or her behavior. Other times, the solution is to change the animal's behavior. Various tools and strategies are used to reduce human-animal conflict, such as behavior modification, repellents, exclusion, habitat modification, relocation, lethal control etc.

  3. Objectives • Solve Problem Not Kill Animals • Prevent Future Problems From Occurring

  4. Keys to being successful • Correctly identifying the culprit (s) • Understanding why the damage is occurring • Be aware of legal status of the animal • Understand options for management, control, & prevention • Repair attractant

  5. Integrated Wildlife Damage Management • Identify problem animal • Can I modify the animal’s habitat to make it less attractive (food, shelter, water)? • Can the animal be kept away from site (mechanical exclusion)? • Can I use a repellent to keep the animal away (visual, auditory, chemical) • How can the animal be removed safely? Traps, shoot, snare, pesticide (last resort) • Repair or remove attract to inhibit further problems

  6. Be an investigator • Tracks, burrows, type of damage, etc. • Learn about your adversary – biology, behavior, etc. Rabbit Deer

  7. Habitat Modification • Trim trees • Stop feeding birds • Removing firewood away from homes • Etc.

  8. When to implement control? • Is it a health or safety hazard? • Causing economic damage? • Just a nuisance? • What is the animal’s legal status?

  9. Exclusion • Build them out, Best & Most Permanent Cover vents Cover chimney Hardware cloth Prevent from landing

  10. Visual Repellents • Effective only in short-term

  11. Tactile Repellents • Sticky, deter, must reapply

  12. Thiram – One of the Best Chemical Repellents • Adverse taste reaction (birds & mammals) • Will not stop damage, just reduce, generally more effective than smell Hot Sauce Only one for Human Edible Crops

  13. Chemical Repellents • Adverse smell reaction (mammals)

  14. Chemical Repellents • Home-made (not as effective) in long run they are more expensive • Soap • Human Hair • Animal Urine • Etc.

  15. Animal Removal (Trapping) • Live-trapping most common • Variety of traps available • Single door more effective than double door • More effective if trap is covered with canvas

  16. Instant-Kill Type Traps • Variety of sizes, companies • Anything that goes through will be killed, breaks the neck almost instantaneously • Useful in front of holes, fences, etc.

  17. Snares • Similar to use as a instant kill type but animal isn’t harmed

  18. Leg Hold Traps • Soft-catch more humane

  19. Poisons • Very few available • Most are not labeled for homeowner use

  20. Sources of Assistance • Private Nuisance Wildlife Control Operators (KDFWR maintains a state-wide list) • USDA-APHIS-Wildlife Services • Kentucky Department of Fish & Wildlife • UK Cooperative Extension Service

More Related