Artigo Revisado por pares

Vertebrate pest damage to wrapped, baled silage in Ireland

2001; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 47; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/09670870010011082

ISSN

1366-5863

Autores

K. McNamara, P. O’Kiely, Jackie Whelan, P.D. Forristal, Hubert T. Fuller, J.J. Lenehan,

Tópico(s)

Wildlife Ecology and Conservation

Resumo

The scale of damage caused by vertebrates to the plastic wrap on baled silage was evaluated on Irish farms. A survey was conducted on 300 farms representative of farming systems and geographical locations throughout Ireland. The scale of damage was classified as farms with 0%, 1-10%, 11-50% or 51-100% of bales with holes in the plastic wrap caused by birds. The proportion of farms within these four classes with damage caused by birds during the short interval between wrapping and removal from the field to storage was 47%, 37%, 15% and 1% of the total, respectively. Correspondingly, during the subsequent storage prior to feedout, bird damage was 37%, 50%, 12%, and 1%. Similarly, the proportions for damage throughout long-term storage due to cats were 71%, 23%, 6% and 0%, while the incidence of damage caused by rats, dogs and farm livestock was comparatively small. The stored bales were fenced against livestock on 86% of farms, while netting, bale painting and other protection methods were used to discourage damage on 2%, 17% and 9% of farms, respectively. The damage caused by birds was more prevalent on farms where the bales were stored on their curved side rather than their flat end, more than twotiers high and in farmyards rather than in fields. Cats damaged the sides and shoulders of the peripheral bales within bale collections, particularly where wrapped bales were stored in the farmyard.

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