Small mammal communities, associated damage to rice and damage prevention in smallholder rice storage facilities in Sri Lanka

Several rodent species damage rice crops and commensal rodents cause damage to stored produce and infrastructure, hygienic problems and they can transmit zoonotic pathogens. In the first such study in Sri Lanka, we identified the main rodent and shrew species and the extent of post-harvest damage ca...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Htwe, Nyo Me, Sarathchandra, Siriwardana Rampalage, Sluydts, Vincent, Nugaliyadde, Lionel, Singleton, Grant R., Jacob, Jens
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/164231
_version_ 1855526572517228544
author Htwe, Nyo Me
Sarathchandra, Siriwardana Rampalage
Sluydts, Vincent
Nugaliyadde, Lionel
Singleton, Grant R.
Jacob, Jens
author_browse Htwe, Nyo Me
Jacob, Jens
Nugaliyadde, Lionel
Sarathchandra, Siriwardana Rampalage
Singleton, Grant R.
Sluydts, Vincent
author_facet Htwe, Nyo Me
Sarathchandra, Siriwardana Rampalage
Sluydts, Vincent
Nugaliyadde, Lionel
Singleton, Grant R.
Jacob, Jens
author_sort Htwe, Nyo Me
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Several rodent species damage rice crops and commensal rodents cause damage to stored produce and infrastructure, hygienic problems and they can transmit zoonotic pathogens. In the first such study in Sri Lanka, we identified the main rodent and shrew species and the extent of post-harvest damage caused in rice storage facilities of smallholder farmers. Netting of rice bags was trialled as a new measure of protection. Field experiments were performed in the three main agro-ecological zones of Sri Lanka. Five rodent species and one shrew species were captured in storage facilities. Rattus rattus, Bandicota indica and Suncus murinus were the dominant species in storage facilities. The small mammal composition was more related to season than to region. In storage, depending on region, 3.2–9.1% (mean 7.6%) of rice was lost to rodents when rice was stored indoors in unprotected polyethylene bags. Netting around bags reduced damage by 89% - equivalent to the annual rice consumption of one person per storage facility, reduced the presence of rodent droppings by 92% and the bag area damaged by rodents by 96%. Our findings clearly show the considerable amount of damage caused by rodents to rice post-harvest across three agro-ecological zones of Sri Lanka and indicate that netting bags considerably reduces damage and contamination. This netting can be used to aid the development of an ecologically-based rodent management (EBRM) program tailored to local conditions. More detailed studies are needed to fully understand the population and breeding ecology of the relevant rodent pest species in relation to damage patterns to optimize management beyond individual structural measures.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace164231
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
publishDateSort 2021
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1642312025-02-19T14:25:32Z Small mammal communities, associated damage to rice and damage prevention in smallholder rice storage facilities in Sri Lanka Htwe, Nyo Me Sarathchandra, Siriwardana Rampalage Sluydts, Vincent Nugaliyadde, Lionel Singleton, Grant R. Jacob, Jens agronomy crop science Several rodent species damage rice crops and commensal rodents cause damage to stored produce and infrastructure, hygienic problems and they can transmit zoonotic pathogens. In the first such study in Sri Lanka, we identified the main rodent and shrew species and the extent of post-harvest damage caused in rice storage facilities of smallholder farmers. Netting of rice bags was trialled as a new measure of protection. Field experiments were performed in the three main agro-ecological zones of Sri Lanka. Five rodent species and one shrew species were captured in storage facilities. Rattus rattus, Bandicota indica and Suncus murinus were the dominant species in storage facilities. The small mammal composition was more related to season than to region. In storage, depending on region, 3.2–9.1% (mean 7.6%) of rice was lost to rodents when rice was stored indoors in unprotected polyethylene bags. Netting around bags reduced damage by 89% - equivalent to the annual rice consumption of one person per storage facility, reduced the presence of rodent droppings by 92% and the bag area damaged by rodents by 96%. Our findings clearly show the considerable amount of damage caused by rodents to rice post-harvest across three agro-ecological zones of Sri Lanka and indicate that netting bags considerably reduces damage and contamination. This netting can be used to aid the development of an ecologically-based rodent management (EBRM) program tailored to local conditions. More detailed studies are needed to fully understand the population and breeding ecology of the relevant rodent pest species in relation to damage patterns to optimize management beyond individual structural measures. 2021-07 2024-12-19T12:53:37Z 2024-12-19T12:53:37Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/164231 en Open Access Elsevier Htwe, Nyo Me; Sarathchandra, Siriwardana Rampalage; Sluydts, Vincent; Nugaliyadde, Lionel; Singleton, Grant R. and Jacob, Jens. 2021. Small mammal communities, associated damage to rice and damage prevention in smallholder rice storage facilities in Sri Lanka. Crop Protection, Volume 145 p. 105638
spellingShingle agronomy
crop science
Htwe, Nyo Me
Sarathchandra, Siriwardana Rampalage
Sluydts, Vincent
Nugaliyadde, Lionel
Singleton, Grant R.
Jacob, Jens
Small mammal communities, associated damage to rice and damage prevention in smallholder rice storage facilities in Sri Lanka
title Small mammal communities, associated damage to rice and damage prevention in smallholder rice storage facilities in Sri Lanka
title_full Small mammal communities, associated damage to rice and damage prevention in smallholder rice storage facilities in Sri Lanka
title_fullStr Small mammal communities, associated damage to rice and damage prevention in smallholder rice storage facilities in Sri Lanka
title_full_unstemmed Small mammal communities, associated damage to rice and damage prevention in smallholder rice storage facilities in Sri Lanka
title_short Small mammal communities, associated damage to rice and damage prevention in smallholder rice storage facilities in Sri Lanka
title_sort small mammal communities associated damage to rice and damage prevention in smallholder rice storage facilities in sri lanka
topic agronomy
crop science
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/164231
work_keys_str_mv AT htwenyome smallmammalcommunitiesassociateddamagetoriceanddamagepreventioninsmallholderricestoragefacilitiesinsrilanka
AT sarathchandrasiriwardanarampalage smallmammalcommunitiesassociateddamagetoriceanddamagepreventioninsmallholderricestoragefacilitiesinsrilanka
AT sluydtsvincent smallmammalcommunitiesassociateddamagetoriceanddamagepreventioninsmallholderricestoragefacilitiesinsrilanka
AT nugaliyaddelionel smallmammalcommunitiesassociateddamagetoriceanddamagepreventioninsmallholderricestoragefacilitiesinsrilanka
AT singletongrantr smallmammalcommunitiesassociateddamagetoriceanddamagepreventioninsmallholderricestoragefacilitiesinsrilanka
AT jacobjens smallmammalcommunitiesassociateddamagetoriceanddamagepreventioninsmallholderricestoragefacilitiesinsrilanka