Free Standard AU & NZ Shipping For All Book Orders Over $80!
Register      Login
Wildlife Research Wildlife Research Society
Ecology, management and conservation in natural and modified habitats
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Ecologically based management of rodents in lowland irrigated rice fields in Indonesia

Jens Jacob A B E , Sudarmaji C , Grant R. Singleton A D , Rahmini C , Nur A. Herawati C and Peter R. Brown A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems, GPO Box 284, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.

B Present address Federal Research Centre for Cultivated Plants, Institute for Plant Protection in Horticulture and Forestry, Vertebrate Research, Toppheideweg 88, 48161 Münster, Germany.

C Indonesian Center for Rice Research, Jl Raya 9, Sukamandi, Subang, 41256, Indonesia.

D Present address International Rice Research Institute, DAPO Box 7777, Metro Manila, The Philippines.

E Corresponding author. Email: jens.jacob@jki.bund.de

Wildlife Research 37(5) 418-427 https://doi.org/10.1071/WR10030
Submitted: 19 February 2010  Accepted: 15 June 2010   Published: 11 August 2010

Abstract

Context. Overabundant rodents cause considerable crop damage and, in developing countries of South-east Asia, rodents can be an obstacle to attempts at alleviating poverty. Management is often based on the use of chemicals that can harm non-target species. Therefore, an effective and environmentally benign management approach such as ecologically based rodent management (EBRM) is desirable.

Aims. We compared the effectiveness of EBRM to that of conventional management on populations of rice-field rats (Rattus argentiventer).

Methods. The study was conducted as a large-scale replicated field trial in lowland irrigated rice fields in West Java, Indonesia. EBRM actions included habitat manipulations, removal of rats with trap barrier systems, coordinated rat-control campaigns and synchrony of cropping on the village level. We measured abundance, population structure, and breeding of rice-field rats as well as rice production and crop damage caused by rats.

Key results.Although there was no overall effect of the EBRM treatment on rat abundance, we found decreasing rat abundance in rice-field habitats at the late cropping stage in treated villages and a decrease in body size of rats. In addition, we found fewer reproducing females when EBRM was applied than with the application of conventional methods, whereas male reproductive condition did not decrease. Overall, there was a reduction in mean crop damage when EBRM was applied (4.4 ± 0.4% in treatments v. 2.5 ± 0.4% in experimental controls), which translated into 6% higher rice production.

Conclusions. The results demonstrated that EBRM is an appropriate approach to manage overabundant rodents in irrigated lowland rice-based agro-ecosystems and possibly in other agro-ecosystems. This will provide substantial benefits for smallholder farming communities in developing countries and most likely benefits for ecosystem health.

Implications. The EBRM approach should be used routinely in irrigated lowland rice crops that are at risk of damage by rice-field rats.

Additional keywords: crop damage, Indonesia, lowland irrigated rice, population dynamics, Rattus argentiventer, trap barrier system.


Acknowledgements

We thank the Indonesian Center for Rice Research (I. Las) and the Indonesian Center for Food Crop Research and Development (A. Hasanuddin) for logistic support. Rice farmers, A. Mills, E. Rasdan, Jumanta, T. Purnawan, Asturi and A. W. Anggara helped with fieldwork. The Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research supported the study (Grant AS1 98/36). The research was conducted according to the Australian code of practice for the care and use of animals for scientific purposes (WEAEC 98/99-09; SEAEC 01/02-09). We thank W. J. Müller for assistance with statistics and P. Hall, C. J. Krebs and N. Nicholls for helpful comments on earlier drafts of the paper.


References

Altieri, M. A. , Martin, P. B. , and Lewis, W. J. (1983). A quest for ecologically based pest management systems. Environmental Management 7, 91–99.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Bonnefoy X. , Kampen H. , and Sweeney K. (2008). ‘Public Health Significance of Urban Pests.’ (WHO: Copenhagen.)

Brown, P. R. , and Nguyen, P. T. (2005). Compensation of rodent pests after removal: control of two rat species in an irrigated farming system in the Red River Delta, Vietnam. Acta Oecologica 28, 267–279.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Geddes A. M. W. (1992). ‘The Relative Importance of Pre-harvest Crop Pests in Indonesia.’ (Natural Resources Institute: Kent.)

Hone, J. (2004). Yield, compensation and fertility control: a model for vertebrate pests. Wildlife Research 31, 357–368.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | International Rice Research Institute (2008). What is happening? Available at http://solutions.irri.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=14&Itemid=53 [verified 16 July 2010].

Jacob, J. (2008). The response of small rodents to manipulations of vegetation height in agro-ecosystems. Integrative Zoology 3, 3–10.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Jacob J. , Sudarmaji , and Singleton G. R. (2003 a). Ecologically-based management of ricefield rats on a village scale in West Java – experimental approach and assessment of habitat use. In ‘Rats, Mice and People: Rodent Biology and Management’. (Eds G. R. Singleton, L. A. Hinds, C. J. Krebs and D. M. Spratt.) pp. 191–196. (Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research: Canberra.)

Jacob J. , Nolte D. , Hartono R. , Subagja J. , and Sudarmaji (2003 b). Pre- and post-harvest movements of female ricefield rats in West Javanese ricefields. In ‘Rats, Mice and People: Rodent Biology and Management’. (Eds G. R. Singleton, L. A. Hinds, C. J. Krebs and D. M. Spratt.) pp. 277–280. (Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research: Canberra.)

Jacob, J. , Matulessy, J. , and Sudarmaji, (2004). The effects of imposed sterility of spatial activity of female ricefield rats. Journal of Wildlife Management 68, 1138–1144.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Lam Y. M. (1988). Rice as a trap crop for the rice field rat in Malaysia. In ‘Proceedings of the 13th Vertebrate Pest Conference’. (Eds A. C. Crabb and R. E. Marsh.) pp. 123–128. (University of California: Davis, CA.)

Leirs, H. , Verhagen, R. , Verheyen, W. , Mwanjabe, P. , and Mbise, T. (1996). Forecasting rodent outbreaks in Africa: an ecological basis for Mastomys control in Tanzania. Journal of Applied Ecology 33, 937–943.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Leirs H. , Singleton G. R. , and Hinds L. A. (1999). Ecologically-based rodent management in developing countries: Where to now? In ‘Ecologically-based Management of Rodent Pests’. (Eds G. R. Singleton, L. A. Hinds, H. Leirs and Z. Zhang.) pp. 477–484. (Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research: Canberra.)

Leung, L. K.-P. , and Sudarmaji, (1999). Techniques for trapping the rice-field rat, Rattus argentiventer. Malayan Nature Journal 53, 323–333.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Leung L. K.-P. , Singleton G. R. , Sudarmaji , and Rahmini (1999). Ecologically-based population management of the rice-field rat in Indonesia. In ‘Ecologically-based Management of Rodent Pests’. (Eds G. R. Singleton, L. A. Hinds, H. Leirs and Z. Zhang.) pp. 305–318. (Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research: Canberra.)

Mwanjabe, P. S. , and Leirs, H. (1997). An early warning system for IPM-based rodent control in smallholder farming systems in Tanzania. Belgian Journal of Zoology 127, 49–58.
Nguu Van Nguyen (2009). Sustainable intensification of rice production for food security in the near future – a summary report. Available at http://www.fao.org/fileadmin/templates/agphome/documents/Rice/sustintriceprod.pdf [verified 19 May 2010].

Pech R. P. , Hood G. , Singleton G. R. , Salmon T. , Forrester R. , and Brown P. R. (1999). Models for predicting plagues of house mice (Mus domesticus) in Australia. In ‘Ecologically-based Management of Rodent Pests’. (Eds G. R. Singleton, L. A. Hinds, H. Leirs, Z. Zhang.) pp. 81–112. (Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research: Canberra.)

Poché, R. M. , Haque, M. E. , Main, M. Y. , Sultana, P. , and Karim, M. A. (1981). Rice yield reduction by simulated rat damage in Bangladesh. Tropical Pest Management 27, 242–246.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | van Elsen K. , and van de Fliert E. (1991). Development of a community-based programme on integrated rodent management in Indonesia. In ‘Rodents and Rice’. (Ed. G. R. Quick.) p. 114. (International Rice Research Institute: Los Baños, The Philippines.)