Status: Completed

Start date: 31 January 2016

Completion date: 5 April 2019

Project code: A-010

Species: European rabbits

Summary

Rabbits are Australian agriculture’s most costly vertebrate pest animal with an annual cost exceeding $215 million.

The RHD-Boost project has identified a new strain of RHDV from South Korea (referred to as K5) that is suitable for release into Australia’s rabbit population. K5 has been shown to better overcome the protective effects of the benign virus RCV-A1 amongst the strains tested.

Key achievements

Outputs

  • Coordinated, managed and evaluated the release of RHDV1 K5 across more than 323 community sites and 9 intensively monitored sites.
  • RHDV1-K5 appears to work as a biocide; it is effective at a local scale, but generally does not spread like a self-disseminating biocontrol agent does.

Outcomes

  • A complicating factor during the project was the incursion of a new rabbit virus, RHDV2 in mid-2015. RHDV2 reduced rabbit numbers by 60% at 8 of the 18 intensively-monitored sites, making it much harder to show additional reductions in rabbit numbers at these sites, post RHDV1-K5 release.
  • Data analysis from the RHDV1 K5 release has shown a national average reduction of 34% post release. The intensively-monitored sites showed no significant change in quarterly rabbit growth rate following the release.

Project team

Dr Tarnya Cox

Project Lead | NSW DPI

Emma Sawyers

NSW DPI

Dr Tanja Strive

CSIRO

Melissa Piper

CSIRO

Roslyn Mourant

CSIRO

Peter West

NSW DPI

Cameron Allan

MLA

Ian Evans

AWI

Project partners

This project was funded through an external research grant separate to Portfolio No. 1 project funding.

Scientific publications & reports

Cox TE, Ramsey D.S, Sawyers E, Campbell S, Matthews J and Elsworth P (2019) The impact of RHDV-K5 on rabbit populations in Australia: an evaluation of citizen science surveys to monitor rabbit abundance Scientific Reports 9(1), 1-11. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-51847-w

Ramsey DSL, Cox T, Strive T, Forsyth DM, I Stuart, Hall, R and Campbell S (2020) Emerging RHDV2 suppresses the impact of endemic and novel strains of RHDV on wild rabbit populations Journal of Applied Ecology. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.13548