JOHN L. READ - ECOLOGIST AND AUTHOR
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13/7/2023

SHARING THE SECRET 8  BETTER THAN KFC!

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Many feral cat trappers are adamant that Kentucky Fried Chicken is irresistible to cats.  I’ve often thought KFC is merely a convenient excuse to visit the den of cholesterol before a gruelling trapping trip. But the Finger Lickin’ allure of the Colonel’s secret herbs and spices has now entered textbooks and webpages on cat trapping.

However, as I am proudly free from the spell of any fast food fad, I feel compelled to inform you about a superior cat bait that relegates KFC to ‘brussel sprout’ status. Here’s the story of how our group of South Australian ecologists discovered what really makes cats drool.

My first tantalising glimpse of a native plains mouse was whilst spotlighting for rare mammals with the Dept for Environment ecologist Helen Owens, near Dalhousie Springs in 1990. At the time we felt very privileged to have seen the largest of the Australian desert mice, which was seemingly destined to join other similar species in being driven to extinction. Over the next decade I saw them again several times where Helen, along with Rob Brandle and Katherine Moseby, monitored these endangered mice at the only two remote desert plains where they could be reliably found anywhere in the world.

Then, while searching for the elusive inland taipan on the Moon Plain near Coober Pedy, Katherine and I discovered another population of plains mice. All three localities exemplified the cute rodent’s name, they were expansive treeless plains, indeed largely devoid of any permanent vegetation. With the exception of the occasional patrolling dingo, you had more chance of seeing Mad Max or Priscilla out there than any mammal larger than a plains mouse. We assumed that treeless plains were somehow integral to plains mouse survival – but we were wrong.

Fast forward to the new millennium and we no longer had to pack swags, eskies and spare jerrys to head out to find plains mice. They came to us. Plains mice spread hundreds of kilometres from their last remaining refuges and turned up en masse at Roxby, Coober Pedy and even the northern Flinders Ranges. It was an extraordinary resurgence, precipitated by the decline of feral cats and foxes after rabbits, their main prey in many deserts, were all but wiped out by calicivirus.

Plains mice found their way into the Arid Recovery Reserve at Roxby, mixing with reintroduced bilbies and bettongs for the first time in over a century. Before long they became the most abundant mammal in the Reserve, in constant danger of being skittled as we drove slowly at night looking for their rarer, reintroduced mates. And they were not just restricted to barren plains. We found their holes and runways all over dunes, through mulga woodlands and on saltbush flats. Their resurgence explained historic records  from the well vegetated Flinders Ranges and Eyre Peninsula, where the vegetation is vastly different to their last stronghold in the open desert plains.

KFC John! Get back on track! 

Whilst we were astounded by the plains mouse resurgence on dunes at Arid Recovery, a group of us was also religiously dissecting every feral cat that was shot or trapped in the region. Kelli-Jo Kovac, Hugh McGregor, Katherine and I dissected 2,293 cats over 27 years, an odorous privilege on a scale that no other Australian scientists have matched. To work out what animals cats preferred to hunt, we compared the 3,234 animal remains we found in cat’s guts with over 70,000 animal records we had accumulated from the region.
You’ve probably already guessed.

The number one animal selected by feral cats was the plains mouse: 50g of rodent flesh packaged up in a cute furry parcel. This reinforced our observations of cats patrolling the boundary of the Arid Recovery Reserve, feasting on the smorgasbord of plains and hopping mice spilling through the cat-proof fence. Most cats preferred catching plains mice to any bait, even greasy portions from a red and white bucket. It dawned on us that plains mice didn’t particularly like barren plains, but they were the only place these furred ice-creams could persist where rabbits were scarce and dingoes kept feral cats at bay.

We now had a chance to see if plains mice could also re-establish in other parts of their former range where cats were eliminated. Thirty years ago I would have scoffed at an attempt to reintroduce them to mallee woodlands and spinifex dunes on the Eyre Peninsula, but we are now trying just that in our Mallee Refuge exclosure at Secret Rocks.
In early May we moved 50 plains mice, all readily captured within a couple of hours in just one small section of the Arid Recovery Reserve. Some were ‘soft released’ into pens with food and shelter, and 19 were fitted with tiny radio collars to help us track their survival and movements for their first 6 weeks. Would they dig deep enough holes to escape the cold? Would they find enough food and avoid the owls? Could they compete with the larger Mitchell’s hopping mouse? Would they run out through the fence and be gobbled by cats?
​
Every day we learn a little more about whether these endearing and very tasty rodents might survive, maybe even thrive, in such a different environment to where they have lived for over a century. It’s way too early to even guess the answer but we know, by removing cats and foxes, we’ve given them a chance. 

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5 Comments
Janet
19/7/2023 05:45:18 pm

All good, good and good. Cats are the problem so is it possible to put even more wire at the base of the fence so the precious mice can’t get out to be clawed and mauled by cats.yes, it’s onerous but if so much trouble has already been gone to. ( special English) then let’s starve the cats.

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John Read
20/7/2023 10:54:32 am

Hi Janet
Thanks for your supportive words.

However, although it may at first appear counterproductive or perverse, we actually want our plains mice, and bandicoots and phascogales to be able to get through our fence. We have a cat/fox 'exclosure', not a cute and cuddly 'enclosure'. Our aim is that populations build up within our 3100ha 'safehaven' and then filter out and repopulate adjacent areas. Safehavens can actually become overpopulated if animals cant filter out so we want some to leave and we spend lots of effort controlling cats around the outside of the fence to give them a better chance - indeed in the last week we have trapped 3 feral cats and our Felixer has squirted one just outside our Fence

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Sue Metcalf
21/7/2023 05:42:32 am

Great to hear about the plains mice. But I did notice your are still trapping - so I’m curious. I’m sure you wouldn’t use the mice as bait. So what are you using? Accidentally found a very expensive bait..-Recovery Formula Royale Cainer Dog Food. Brings feral cats from miles around. But at $4.50 for a 200 ml can not cost effective.
Just a little laugh fir you. Keep up your great work.

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John Read
21/7/2023 09:24:12 am

Hi Sue

We continue to control cats outside our Mallee Refuge fence using a combination of techniques including mostly Felixers, but also occasionally cage traps (usually baited with rabbit) and soft leg hold traps with cat urine lure. Our aim is to create a buffer zone into which our animals can disperse through the fence

Weve found that different cats are attracted to different baits/lures (and some show no interest). Not sure if we will fork out for the expensive Royal Dog food !

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Bree
27/7/2023 05:19:00 pm

Great work, info and humor (as always) John et al. Look forward to hearing how the PM's go at Secret Rocks, hope you don't get bitten too often (little buggas)!!

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    John L. Read, PhD, author-ecologist

    Wakefield Press, Dear Grandpa, Why? Reflections From Kokoda to Hiroshima

    Praise for Dear Grandpa, Why?


    'This is a most unusual book but an insistently interesting one ... This book’s strongest virtue is in Read’s wrestling with the past and his initial desire for accountability over the death of his grandfather, giving way to something akin to forgiveness.' - ~ Christopher Bantick, Weekly Times

    'This compelling book is written from the heart, and easily draws the reader in on the journey with Read seeking answers about his grandfather's sacrifice. I recommend it to all readers. It provides a personal entry-point for understanding the events that led to the war in the Pacific and raises many questions about what causes war and what we should do in the future to prevent such terrible loss and waste of life.' - ~ Helen Eddy, Read Plus

    'Lovely and heart-warming story.'
    ~ Nic Klaassen, Flinders Ranges Research

    'John L. Read's odyssey provides a historical insight into the cause of the war against Japan and a graphic portrayal of the cultural grief experienced by families who lost loved ones.' - ~ ~ Charlie Lynn, Kokoda Treks

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