11–16 May 2025
Ankaran
Europe/Ljubljana timezone

Invasive species management strategies in a One Health system

13 May 2025, 11:00
20m
Ankaran

Ankaran

Adria Ankaran Hotel & Resort Jadranska cesta 25, 6280 Ankaran, Slovenia
Oral presentation Oral Presentations

Speaker

Katherine August

Description

August, Katherine1*; Beatham, Sarah2; Birtles, Richard3; Bray, Daniel1; Broadhurst, Holly3; Croft, Simon2; Marshall, Harry4; Massei, Giovanna5; Orchard, Rachel4; Parkes-Withers, Amy2; Belmain, Steven1

1 University of Greenwich, Natural Resources Institute, Medway, UK
2 Animal and Plant Health Agency, York, UK
3 University of Salford, School of Science, Engineering & Environment, Salford, UK
4 Forest Research, Edinburgh, UK
5 University of York, Department of Environment & Geography, York, UK
* katie.august@greenwich.ac.uk

DOI: 10.20315/evmc.2025.062

Grey squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis) is an invasive species in the UK which threatens plants through bark stripping and wildlife through disease transmission and competition. Grey squirrels are also of growing relevance to human health as reservoir hosts of both Borrelia burgdorferi, the agent of Lyme disease, and Ixodes ricinus, the tick vector which feeds on a range of animal species and people. Current strategies to manage grey squirrel populations require intense trapping and/or shooting. The potential of fertility control to reduce grey squirrel populations has not been tested. While fertility control may have a slower impact on population density, it would alter the age ratio in the population to reduce numbers of juvenile squirrels which are more likely to disperse and transmit pathogens and ticks than adults. In this project, we are comparing the potential efficacy of fertility and traditional control methods in isolated woodlands in Cumbria, UK. We estimated grey squirrel and tick densities before and after three culling treatments: no cull, full traditional cull, and a simulated fertility treatment cull whereby only juvenile squirrels are removed from the population. Ticks will be tested for pathogen presence and blood meal analysis performed to assess the host species being fed upon. Based on the results we will model the effectiveness of fertility control and culling in reducing the risk of Lyme’s disease.

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