Costs and benefits of pre‐feeding for possum control

Abstract
Four control operations, each with paired pre‐feed and no‐pre‐feed treatments, and comprising two baited with carrot and two with cereal, provided strong support for the hypothesis that pre‐feeding produces higher possum kills than no pre‐feeding. In these replicates, even where high kills were achieved, the modelled two‐ to three‐fold extension of the period of population depression given by pre‐feeding was sufficient to warrant the expense of the additional bait sown. The benefits of pre‐feeding were clear‐cut, and were greatest where poorest kills were achieved, irrespective of bait type. Pre‐feeding is thus likely to reduce the probability of failure and should be considered a form of operational insurance.