GPS collars track wild dogs, foxes

By on 31 May, 2011
 
Wild dogs in NSW have been fitted with GPS collars, as part of a $1.33 million project to determine the most effective strategies for controlling wild dogs and foxes.
 
Thirty-nine dogs in the Walcha, Macleay and Hastings areas have been given the collars, allowing researchers to track exactly where the dogs travel and which poisoned baits they take.
 
The program will measure the effectiveness of using the poison 1080 in baits at rates of 10 and 40 baits per kilometre. To better judge effectiveness, the collars are equipped with a mortality sensor that tells the researcher if the dog is alive or not.
 
“We’re committed to reducing the cost of wild dogs to agriculture, the environment, economy and the whole community by ensuring the best management strategies in place,” NSW Primary Industries Minister, Katrina Hodgkinson said.
 
NSW grazier Brian Tomalin said the project would help reduce the damage caused by wild dogs, which costs the state $16m annually.
 
“This project gives us more tools to work with to help reduce the costs of damage,” Mr Tomalin said.
 
“The more knowledge we have the better control we can have.”

You may also like to read:



Newsletter

Sign up now to stay up to date about all the news from Spatial Source. You will get a newsletter every week with the latest news.

Q&A with Zaffar Sadiq Mohamed-Ghouse
Combatting climate change, saving lives and building better ...
Satellite imagery helps coastal data collection
A new study highlights the accuracy of satellite-derived bat...
Geospatial in School Awards recipients announced
Two outstanding teachers and a high school student have been...
The geospatial reality capture revolution
Aptella’s solutions are transforming spatial data and revo...
Evolution in survey: XGRIDS and Gaussian splats
Using 3DGS and SLAM technology, XGRIDS bridges the gap betwe...
Emlid joins Esri’s global Partner Network
The move will enable Esri ArcGIS users to take advantage of ...