Food preference and the effect of predator cues on the foraging behaviour of House Rat (Rattus tanezumi)

The House Rat (Rattus tanezumi) is a major pest in the agriculture and food industry, a carrier of zoonotic diseases, and a source of nuisance to society. Poisoning is not an ecologically desirable method to control the rat population due to its effect on non-target animals. This article reported on...

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Main Authors: Wong, Lok Jinn, Andrew Alek, Tuen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Malaysian Society of Applied Biology 2020
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Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/34160/1/wong.pdf
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spelling my.unimas.ir.341602023-03-31T03:38:35Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/34160/ Food preference and the effect of predator cues on the foraging behaviour of House Rat (Rattus tanezumi) Wong, Lok Jinn Andrew Alek, Tuen QL Zoology The House Rat (Rattus tanezumi) is a major pest in the agriculture and food industry, a carrier of zoonotic diseases, and a source of nuisance to society. Poisoning is not an ecologically desirable method to control the rat population due to its effect on non-target animals. This article reported on the use of predator cues to control the rat’s foraging behavior. Food preference for sugarcane, corn, oil palm fruit, and young coconut flesh was determined first using a modified “cafeteria method” with a central cage connected to four feeding stations by PVC tubes. Then the effect of predator cues (3-D model and call of an owl, a combination of model and call and no predator cue as control) on foraging behavior was tested by manipulating these cues near the feeding station. Giving up density (GUD), which is the amount of food remaining at the feeding stations, was measured in both experimental phases. Treatment means were analyzed using ANOVA and compared using the Tukey test. The finding showed that House Rats preferred young coconut flesh over other test foods. All predator cues increased GUD significantly (p<0.01) but the 3-D model was the most effective. This study suggests a potential use of predator cues to control rat pest. Malaysian Society of Applied Biology 2020-12-31 Article PeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/34160/1/wong.pdf Wong, Lok Jinn and Andrew Alek, Tuen (2020) Food preference and the effect of predator cues on the foraging behaviour of House Rat (Rattus tanezumi). Malaysian Applied Biology, 49 (5). pp. 33-40. http://myjms.mohe.gov.my/index.php/mabjournal/login/signIn
institution Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
building Centre for Academic Information Services (CAIS)
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
content_source UNIMAS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.unimas.my/
language English
topic QL Zoology
spellingShingle QL Zoology
Wong, Lok Jinn
Andrew Alek, Tuen
Food preference and the effect of predator cues on the foraging behaviour of House Rat (Rattus tanezumi)
description The House Rat (Rattus tanezumi) is a major pest in the agriculture and food industry, a carrier of zoonotic diseases, and a source of nuisance to society. Poisoning is not an ecologically desirable method to control the rat population due to its effect on non-target animals. This article reported on the use of predator cues to control the rat’s foraging behavior. Food preference for sugarcane, corn, oil palm fruit, and young coconut flesh was determined first using a modified “cafeteria method” with a central cage connected to four feeding stations by PVC tubes. Then the effect of predator cues (3-D model and call of an owl, a combination of model and call and no predator cue as control) on foraging behavior was tested by manipulating these cues near the feeding station. Giving up density (GUD), which is the amount of food remaining at the feeding stations, was measured in both experimental phases. Treatment means were analyzed using ANOVA and compared using the Tukey test. The finding showed that House Rats preferred young coconut flesh over other test foods. All predator cues increased GUD significantly (p<0.01) but the 3-D model was the most effective. This study suggests a potential use of predator cues to control rat pest.
format Article
author Wong, Lok Jinn
Andrew Alek, Tuen
author_facet Wong, Lok Jinn
Andrew Alek, Tuen
author_sort Wong, Lok Jinn
title Food preference and the effect of predator cues on the foraging behaviour of House Rat (Rattus tanezumi)
title_short Food preference and the effect of predator cues on the foraging behaviour of House Rat (Rattus tanezumi)
title_full Food preference and the effect of predator cues on the foraging behaviour of House Rat (Rattus tanezumi)
title_fullStr Food preference and the effect of predator cues on the foraging behaviour of House Rat (Rattus tanezumi)
title_full_unstemmed Food preference and the effect of predator cues on the foraging behaviour of House Rat (Rattus tanezumi)
title_sort food preference and the effect of predator cues on the foraging behaviour of house rat (rattus tanezumi)
publisher Malaysian Society of Applied Biology
publishDate 2020
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/34160/1/wong.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/34160/
http://myjms.mohe.gov.my/index.php/mabjournal/login/signIn
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score 13.160551