Otago Daily Times

Thermal imaging detects wallabies

- HAMISH MACLEAN hamish.maclean@odt.co.nz

ENVIRONMEN­T Canterbury has tested a new tool in its fight to stop the spread of wallabies this winter.

ECan, along with wildlife removal and conservati­on company Trap and Trigger and Heliventur­es NZ, flew three test operations with thermal animaldete­ction equipment to detect and kill the invasive pest in areas outside South Canterbury’s ‘‘containmen­t area’’ where the animals are known to have spread.

In 10 hours’ flying this winter covering about 10,000ha, primarily focused on the south bank of the Waitaki River, the new ‘‘crosscheck’’ layer in ECan’s wallaby control resulted in only one wallaby being detected and killed.

However, ECan biosecurit­y team leader Brent Glentworth called it a positive result.

The technology still had its limits and its precision as a surveying tool was not yet known, but if there had been a high number of wallabies in the areas, they would have been detected, he said.

‘‘When we were doing that flying on the south bank, we were picking up a lot of animals, hares and rabbits in scrub — we know we can find really small animals,’’ Mr Glentworth said.

‘‘We’re confident that there’s not lots and lots of wallabies out there, but we’re also aware that it’s not the beall and endall. We can’t just rely on thermal imaging; we can’t say ‘We’ve flown it and found nothing’.’’

The primary method of control, using contractor­s with dogs on the ground, finished at the end of August, and contractor­s had taken animals out of the area surveyed by the thermal imaging equipment in the helicopter.

‘‘We’ve been putting mananddog teams in since 2008, and relying on that method, and we’re getting kills,’’ Mr Glentworth said. ‘‘But we’ve had no way of having another check on what may be left.

‘‘We’ve put in more effort over the last 12 months and we’re getting less wallabies. I hope it means that our wallaby population on the south bank is declining.’’

Ongoing trials by Landcare Research using GPScollare­d wallabies to determine the ‘‘rough precision’’ of thermal imaging, dog teams and hunters by the number of encounters with those animals would help to determine the precision of the thermal imaging techniques.

In 2016, a report coauthored by Lincolnbas­ed Landcare Research research leader

Bruce Warburton warned that with wallaby control unchanged, the marsupials, which disrupt biodiversi­ty and cause production losses for rural industries, could, in a worstcase scenario, cover onethird of the South Island.

Trap and Trigger owner Jordan Munn said while the thermal detection system used in the winter operation was not ‘‘as sensitive at detection as an invasive ground hunter and dog’’, it could cover more than

10,000ha each day. And he said the company was working on improving the system ‘‘to further increase its detection ability’’.

‘‘We’re only just establishi­ng this technology for wallabies,’’ he said. As the methodolog­y was improved — perhaps surveying

areas in the late afternoon as opposed to the morning as was done this winter — detection rates would improve and he hoped it could ultimately become a primary control method for the pests.

 ?? PHOTOS: SUPPLIED ?? Search and destroy . . . Sharpshoot­er Jak Elliot, with rifle, and Trap and Trigger owner and thermal operator Jordan Munn are ready for a thermal imaging wallabycon­trol operation this winter. Right: A wallaby is spotted from a helicopter with thermal imaging equipment, with high resolution (4K) video as comparison.
PHOTOS: SUPPLIED Search and destroy . . . Sharpshoot­er Jak Elliot, with rifle, and Trap and Trigger owner and thermal operator Jordan Munn are ready for a thermal imaging wallabycon­trol operation this winter. Right: A wallaby is spotted from a helicopter with thermal imaging equipment, with high resolution (4K) video as comparison.
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