INTRODUCTION
Trapping animals could be the single most important challenge in mammal ecology research. The technics and equipment (e.g., traps) or tools for this can be costly, time-consuming (Trapp & Flaherty, 2017; Waubdy et al., 2019), and can have a negative impact on the welfare of the individuals, which is detrimental both from an ethical point of view (Waubdy et al., 2019) and for the research results (for example in capture-recapture estimates; Waubdy et al., 2019).
The two most popular live trapping techniques are pitfall traps and box traps (most commonly Sherman and Tomahawk; Santos-Filho et al., 2015; Trapp & Flaherty, 2017; Waubdy et al., 2019). These techniques have been previously compared for small mammals in terms of number of animals captured, richness, and diversity obtained by each method, showing mixed results (Hice & Velazco, 2013; Santos-Filho et al., 2015; Waubdy et al., 2019); thus, no single method can be declared as the optimal, yet several studies show that the combined use of methods is the best option for diversity studies (Palmeirim et al., 2019). Despite this, studies targeting a single species are rare, and few include the ethical implications (but see Pestell & Petit, 2007) and the damage caused to the animal during capture, thus creating a knowledge gap (especially for medium-sized mammals). At the same time, most recent studies were performed in tropical forests (Santos-Filho et al., 2015; Helder et al., 2019), leaving other ecosystems like xerophylous shrublands relatively unexplored.
The objective of this study is to compare the efficiency of the Tomahawk and pitfall traps for trapping opossums (Didelphis virginiana; Kerr, 1792) as well as the differences in the sex ratios and physical and psychological effects of both techniques.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
The study was conducted in “Reserva Ecológica del Pedregal de San Ángel” (REPSA) an ecological reserve located in Mexico City (Mexico). The dominant vegetation type is xerophylous shrubs with an important cover of herbaceous vegetation, trees are relatively common but generally small, and there is an important variation in vegetation and local conditions (Cano-Santana, 1994; Rzedowski, 1954). The reserve terrain is rugged and soil scarce, as it is located on a recent lava field, with a mean rainfall of 833 mm and average temperature of 15.5 ˚C (detailed description in Rzedowski, 1954; REPSA, 2020).
The trapping was designed for Virginia opossum (hereafter opossum) Didelphis virginiana, a medium-sized omnivore (description given in McManus, 1974) that is common in the study site (Arenas-Pérez, 2016).
Traps were set-up in a paired design with a Tomahawk (27×27×72 cm) and a pitfall trap located at no more than 5 m from each other; the trapping points were situated between 30 and 500 m apart. Since the soil is scarce in the study site, plastic buckets (75 cm high and 44 cm wide) were used as pitfall traps (similar to Helder et al., 2019) and installed close to big rocks or trees that allowed the opossums to easily climb inside (see Fig. 1), the traps were secured by ropes to avoid falling, covered with leaves or grass and filled with a small amount of the same material, this was made to: 1) hide the trap, 2) soften the impact from the fall and 3) provide material for a temporary nest for the animal (since external materials may interfere with the Tomahawk activation mechanism no vegetation was added to this type of trap). It is to be noted that the pitfall traps here are not used in the most traditional way, by digging holes in the ground (like Palmeirim et al., 2019). Still, the method used here is the only possible alternative of using pitfall traps in locations with scarce soil, and it has the advantage of being less labor-intensive. Furthermore, there is no disturbance in the soil, and damage to the root system; this is especially important when digging traps for medium and large animals since the volume of the soil removed could be considerable.
Trapping was conducted from November 20 to December 10 of 2019, during the dry season in the REPSA. Traps were activated between 19:00 and 22:00 and inspected between 7:00 and 10:00 local time.
Four to six pairs of traps were active each night, and each 7-8 nights the location of the traps was changed, giving 108 trap-nights for each trap type. Commercial cat food (80 g of Whiskas® paté, beef, or tuna flavor) and apples (one apple per trap) were used as bait. The data collected: stress level (considering that a sleeping opossum has a low-stress level and if awaken it is stressed), sex, and injuries caused by the trap. In addition, the animals were marked with Methylene blue on left or right foot according to the trap type they were found in. To ensure that the manipulation of the animals did not affect the stress levels, this factor was the first measured, carefully approaching the trap to look if the animals were active and its position (this allows to distinguish between sleeping and catatonia, a defense mechanism used by opossums).
Sleeping was considered as a low-stress sign because opossums are nocturnal animals, and previous studies show that their activity in the morning (when the traps were inspected) is very low (Coronel-Arellano et al., 2021), and the normal behavior at this time is sleeping (McManus, 1971). Therefore, an awake animal found in the trap indicates that normal activities and sleeping patterns were affected (almost certainly by the stress caused by trapping).
A sign test was used to compare the effectiveness of the traps, and a χ2 test was used to compare the other characteristics (sex proportions, proportions of recaptures, number of injured and sleeping individuals; see Table 1). Since Tomahawk traps were more effective than pitfall when comparing the sex proportions and the number of injured and sleeping animals, the null hypothesis was a 0.625:0.375 ratio, since this is the ratio of captures by the two types of traps. Analyses were made using the R statistical package BADA (Arnholt & Evans, 2017; R Core Team, 2018).
Variable | Tomahawk | Pitfall | p |
---|---|---|---|
Total captured | 100 | 61 | <0.001 |
Female (including recaptures) | 54 | 35 | 0.722 |
Male (including recaptures) | 46 | 25 | 0.690 |
Females (no recaptures) | 22 | 16 | 0.558 |
Males (no recaptures) | 14 | 7 | 0.693 |
First capture | 36 | 23 | 0.814 |
Recaptures | 64 | 37 | 0.857 |
Injured | 27 | 2 | <0.001 |
Sleeping | 14 | 44 | <0.001 |
The lowest current prices for Tomahawk traps in Mexico were obtained, considering that traps fitted for this species were at least 25 cm wide and 25 cm high.
RESULTS
A total of 161 captures were made, 100 using Tomahawk traps and 61 using pitfall traps, one animal captured in the pitfall trap managed to escape during the inspection, and no data could be taken; therefore, it was considered for the overall effectiveness analysis but excluded from the rest. The effectiveness of the Tomahawk traps was significantly greater than the pitfall (a 93 % and 56 % of effectiveness, respectively). The sex ratio did not differ from a 1:1 in Tomahawk and pitfall, nor in the pooled data of both traps (in all cases p > 0.1). At the same time, pitfall traps were less stressful (most of the animals found inside were sleeping) and safer for the opossums, although the percentage of recaptures was the same for both trap types (see Table 1). The lowest cost for a Tomahawk trap was 1,345.00 Mexican Pesos (including shipping), while the cost for the pitfall trap was 100.00 Mexican Pesos (save 92.6 %) and are readily available.
Two events of double captures took place in pitfall traps (6.6% of the captures); all animals in double captures were male. In one event (two young males), no signs of interaction between the animals were noticed; in the other (two adult males), the opossums fought, and both exhibited several injuries, although not life threatening (being this two the only ones that suffered injuries in this type of trap). In Tomahawk traps, 27 % of animals suffered some injuries, 22 % in nose and face, 3 % in tail, and 2 % in nose and tail; injuries registered were minor.
Qualitative observation showed that opossums found in the pitfall traps conditioned the trap as a provisional nest using the vegetation provided (Fig. 1) or hide beneath it (this is why one opossum managed to escape). Furthermore, opossums were easier to manipulate when sleeping in both types of traps (especially pitfall traps).
DISCUSSION
The first result that stands out is the extremely high efficiency of the traps. In a previous study, Arenas-Pérez (2016), working with the same species in the REPSA reserve in 2014 and 2015, was able to catch 45 individuals in 1,680 trap nights using Tomahawk traps giving an efficiency of 2.7 % (data provided only for new captures). While in this study, the efficiency of newly captured animals for Tomahawk traps was 13.3 times higher: 36 % (see Table 1). Considering that Arenas-Pérez (2016) used several types of bait, including cat food (the main bait in the present study), two explanations for these differences could be made: 1) the previous study was made during the rainy season, and this could affect the food availability and the detectability of the bait, 2) the population increased in size drastically from 2015 to 2019. However, the first explanation is unlikely since the Arenas-Pérez (2016) study was made between May and October and this study in November and December the differences in vegetation between those periods, although noticeable (see Cano-Santana, 1994), are not significant enough to cause a tenfold change in captures, and other studies (Pestell & Petit, 2007) show that differences between trapping periods are smaller than the observed in this work. The second explanation could be related to the program for removing dogs (Canis familiaris) from the reserve That took place between 2015 and 2019 and archived the goal of removing most dogs (pers. com. Gil-Alarcón and Arenas-Pérez). With the removal of this predator, opossums became one of the biggest mammals in REPSA (Hortelano-Moncada et al., 2009); the risk of predation is greatly diminished and that could have caused a significant increase in the population and a change in their behavior. Although the population change could be a part of a natural variation or a combination of several of the factors described, thus a long-term monitoring program is recommended.
Tomahawk traps were 1.6 times more effective than pitfall traps. This is consistent with previous studies (Hice & Velazco, 2013; Santos-Fihlo et al., 2015) that show that Tomahawk traps are more effective to capture species of Didelphis. At the same time, pitfall traps were 13.5 times cheaper, thus being 8.4 times more cost-effective, similar to Waubdy et al. (2019). The greater effectiveness of the Tomahawk traps could be explained in this case by the fact that these traps were located at ground level and did not require to climb, thus the bait inside these traps was found first in the trapping point. This suggests that in absence of Tomahawk traps, pitfall trap efficiency could be greater since the first animal to arrive at the trapping point was more likely to get in the Tomahawk trap, and the captures in the pitfalls were due to posterior arrivals (that in some cases could have not happen). At the same time, D. virginiana opossums are good climbers (McManus, 1974), therefore climbing into the pitfall trap wouldn’t represent a great effort and other factors could explain the lower efficiency of the traps.
There was no preference of the nether type of trap for the sex of captured individuals. The proportion of male to female individuals did not differ significantly from 1:1 proportion, which is normal for the species (McManus, 1974), suggesting that both methods have little or no bias for the sex and information obtained in studies using these methods is valid.
The number of first captures and recaptures did not differ from the proportions expected among the traps (Table 1). This suggests that the effect of the capture did not affect or affect equally the probability of being captured in the future, thus implying a low psychological impact on the animal, an inefficient learning process, or that the gain of food in the traps outweighs the negative consequences of being trapped. At the same time, opossums suffered more stress and were more commonly injured inside the Tomahawk traps (see Table 1), this is because the Tomahawk traps have wire walls and while the animals were trying to escape through the bars injured the nose, something that cannot happen in a rounded and smooth plastic pitfall trap. Furthermore, the see-through walls of the Tomahawk trap created an illusion of an escape possibility and allowed the opossum to see around, contributing to stress the animal. This was not true for the pitfall traps and could explain why most animals (72 %) captured in pitfall traps were sleeping and thus were less stressed, while only 14 % of the Tomahawk trapped opossums were sleeping. This is especially important since sleeping animals were easier to manipulate as they did not offer much resistance in the first and most difficult moments of handling, which reduces the manipulation time and risk of injuries of both researcher and animal; therefore, the best thing for an animal to do when trapped is to sleep. Another factor that could have contributed to the differences in the stress was the vegetation provided in the pitfall traps that was used to condition the trap as a provisional nest (this cannot be performed in the Tomahawk traps since external objects interfere with the activation mechanism). These defects in the Tomahawk traps could be corrected if the walls are lined with a solid material (preferably plastic). The significant disadvantage of the pitfall traps is that they allow for the capture of more than one animal (Waubdy et al., 2019) and the males of this species tend to have antagonistic encounters (McManus, 1974). In this study, there were two double captures, representing 6.6 % of the captured possums; in one (two young males), no signs of fighting were found, but the other pair (two adult males) fought, resulting in injuries for both, the injuries were not life-threatening but more serious than the injures commonly found on the Tomahawk trapped possums. Though it has to be considered that fights are common between possum males (McManus, 1974), and it is unclear if the traps contribute to the frequency or severity of those fights. No female-female or female-male double captures were observed, yet since double captures are rare, it cannot be assured that these are rarer than the male-male encounters.
This suggests that Tomahawk traps are more efficient, but pitfall traps are notoriously cheaper. For ethical implications, it is not clear which is better; the more stressful Tomahawk traps that have a high chance of causing minor injuries or the less stressful pitfall traps that have a low probability of causing wounds, in the infrequent cases that two males are captured together, therefore the decision of which trap to use has to be made case by case. Yet these results suggest that the pitfall traps could be ethically better for species that do not fight when confined to reduced space and for the locations where densities of antagonistic animals are low, and the probability of a double capture is low.