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Related: About this forumWorld's largest rat extermination returns South Georgia to its bird life
Three helicopters encountered perilous flying conditions while peppering the southern Atlantic island with 183 tonnes of the poison Brodifacoum. Photograph: Roland Gockel
A team on South Georgia have successfully completed the world's largest rodent eradication in an effort to rid the British territory of millions of rats and mice.
Against the backdrop of an approaching Antarctic winter between February and May, three helicopters encountered perilous flying conditions while peppering the southern Atlantic island with 183 tonnes of the poison Brodifacoum. The team of 25 baited an area of 224 sq miles (580 sq km). The area targeted dwarfed the previous largest rodent eradication, on New Zealand's Campbell Island, by five times.
The project director, Prof Tony Martin, said the team, managed by the Dundee-based South Georgia Heritage Trust, aimed to return the 104 mile (167 km) long island to the millions of seabirds wiped out by rats and mice introduced by 19th- and 20th-century whalers and sealers.
"South Georgia, before man came along, was probably the most important bird breeding island in the world. And it is no longer anything close to that," he said. Probably less than 1% of the original population of burrowing seabirds remains, Martin said.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2013/jul/04/worlds-largest-rat-extermination
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World's largest rat extermination returns South Georgia to its bird life (Original Post)
dipsydoodle
Jul 2013
OP
Champion Jack
(5,378 posts)1. Then, how do they get rid of the poison?
Paulie
(8,462 posts)2. Persistence: brodifacoum is persistent in soils with a half-life of 157 days.
So says this site below. The OP mentions that land mammals are not indigenous to the island and the locations not covered by ice are smaller.
http://www.abcbirds.org/abcprograms/policy/toxins/Profiles/brodifacoum.html
Igel
(35,320 posts)3. Moreover it wouldn't be a problem if the poison persisted for years.
If the birds don't eat it, who much cares? Not much else there.
Sea birds eat fish.
Seals eat fish.
If the poisoned mammals all run off into the sea, well, the sea's a big place and the poison would be (a) metabolised by something and (b) diluted below minimum required strength.
A small number of seabirds would ingest some of the poisonous mammals. A small price to pay for eradication of the vermin.