INTRODUCTION
Bovine tuberculosis (TB) is caused by an obligate parasite bacillus, Mycobacterium bovis, a zoonotic pathogen that has a particularly wide mammalian host range [Reference O'Reilly and Daborn1, Reference Good and Duignan2]. In New Zealand, that host range includes not only farmed cattle and deer, but also a large number of introduced wild mammals, most notably brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula), pigs (Sus scrofa), ferrets (Mustela furo) and wild red deer (Cervus elaphus) [Reference Coleman and Cooke3]. Possums are the only wild species considered to be true TB maintenance hosts in New Zealand [Reference Morris and Pfeiffer4, Reference Nugent5], since the densities at which pigs, ferrets and deer occur in the wild are generally below the level at which they can independently maintain the M. bovis infection cycle [Reference Nugent5–Reference Nugent, Yockney and Whitford7]. Consistent with that paradigm, a national programme combining TB testing of livestock (with slaughter of test-positive animals) and intensive lethal control of possum populations has resulted in a >95% reduction in TB levels in New Zealand's farmed livestock since 1995 [8].
The decline in TB levels in both livestock and wildlife from large areas of New Zealand has prompted a progressive shift in the national disease management strategy, away from simply applying lethal control of possums to break the disease maintenance cycle and towards a mix of continued control coupled with TB surveillance [Reference Hutchings, Hancox and Livingstone9]. However, because infected possum populations have already been reduced to very low levels, and because the animals themselves have small home ranges (typically <30 ha [Reference Cowan, Clout and Montague10]), direct surveillance of possum populations for the presence of TB using classical sampling theory can be imprecise [Reference Nugent, Whitford and Young11, Reference Nugent12] and is becoming increasingly expensive. Surveillance for TB is therefore becoming increasingly focused not only on possums themselves, but additionally on the use of other wildlife species as ‘sentinels’ for the ongoing presence of M. bovis in the environment. A key advantage of using sentinel species is that they can be equally, or more, susceptible to becoming infected by an encounter with a tuberculous possum as can possums themselves, but range more widely (thus effectively ‘searching’ for the presence of TB across a much wider area of the landscape). An understanding of the home-range size of, and temporal patterns of home-range utilization by, TB sentinels – relative to range-use patterns of the primary host (possums) – is thus important in efforts to manage the disease in the environment by means of improved sentinel-based surveillance. Pigs are recognized as being particularly good sentinels for these reasons [Reference Nugent, Whitford and Young11], and both pigs and ferrets have been used to indicate the presence of TB in New Zealand [Reference de Lisle13], while in North America, wild coyotes (Canis latrans) have been reported for use as sentinels for the presence of TB in wild cervid populations [Reference Sangster14–Reference Berentsen16].
In the New Zealand case, where the main reservoir species (the possum) is being controlled and the incidence of TB is declining, future surveys involving sentinel species will aim to determine more the presence or absence of disease, rather than its prevalence. Interpreting the outcome of sentinel surveys where TB is found is comparatively straightforward – it would usually indicate that further possum control and disease surveillance are required. Interpreting the absence of TB in surveyed sentinels is more complex, both in terms of (a) assessing the probability that there truly is no TB persisting in the area surveyed, and also (b) delineating the area that has been effectively ‘searched’ by the sentinel. New concepts based on detection kernels have been developed to account for this, whereby the ‘search effort’ for TB of the sentinel is modelled as a function of its home-range size and the force of infection experienced by that species when a single tuberculous possum is present within the sentinel's home range [Reference Anderson17]. Within the resulting ‘Proof of TB Freedom’ framework [Reference Anderson17, Reference Bosson18], the relative utility of sentinels in providing spatially explicit inference about the likely TB status of the possum population is thus strongly linked to the sentinels’ home-range size. In this paper we therefore present the first comparison, under similar environmental conditions, of ranging behaviour of possums themselves relative to that of the four species most likely to be used as possum TB sentinels (wild red deer, wild ferrets, feral pigs, free-ranging farmed cattle). We focus predominantly on short-term (weekly and monthly) ranging behaviour partly for technical reasons, but also, and more importantly, because that is the range size that appears most relevant in the detection of TB in possums (see Discussion). Our study was not designed in advance but, rather, makes use of movement data collected as part of a series of separate but often interconnected studies. As a consequence, some of our analyses are constrained to, for example, particular subsets of the hosts studied, or to particular seasons.
METHODS
Study area
The study area was centred within the northern South Island high country (NSIHC) of New Zealand (42° S, 173° E; see map in the Supplementary Material for location, study sites and trapping/monitoring areas). The NSIHC area covers some 5000 km2, within which are large farming stations, including Muzzle and Molesworth stations on which this study was conducted. Beef cattle are grazed at a low density (<5/km2) throughout these stations, nominally within 5000–10 000 ha regions bounded by natural features (ravines, major rivers, high ridgelines) but otherwise free to range. We used several study sites (see below and map in the Supplementary Material) within the NSIHC area, but all sites comprised a similar mix of largely unforested, semi-arid mountainous habitats (elevation range 550–2100 m) in which the vegetation is dominated by low-lying shrubs and grasses, interspersed with rose briar, matagouri and other scrubby plants (see [Reference Glen19] for full description). The study sites hold a low-density unmanaged population of possums (typically <1/ha [Reference Byrom20]), low to moderate densities of ferrets (2–4/km2 [Reference Caley and Morriss21]) and feral pigs (1–2/km2 [Reference Byrom20]), and a low density, widely distributed population of wild red deer (<1/km2 [Reference Nugent and Whitford22]). Investigations in the NSIHC area, since 2000, have recorded TB in all five species, with the cattle herds being among the most heavily infected livestock herds remaining in New Zealand, and with very high levels of infection recorded in pigs [Reference Nugent, Yockney and Whitford7, Reference Byrom20, Reference Nugent and Whitford22].
Radio tracking
For collar-fitting, possums were captured using soft-catch leg-hold traps [Reference Glen19], while ferrets were captured using cantilever-type cage traps [Reference Byrom20]. Deer were captured using tranquillizer darts fired from a helicopter. Pigs were bred specifically for the trial from pen-maintained wild pigs sourced from the area, as described previously [Reference Nugent, Yockney and Whitford7]. Cattle steers were fitted with collars during an annual muster for TB testing. For all species, fix-point data were acquired and utilized within 3 weeks of the first fitting of the collars. All procedures were approved by the Landcare Research Animal Ethics Committee.
Two types of collars were used to track animals: either a commercially available GPS package (Sirtrack NZ Ltd, New Zealand) or a homebuilt Landcare Research version. Both collar types could be tracked externally by VHF telemetry (if required) but primarily provided automated GPS data on the date, time, latitude, longitude, and horizontal dilution of precision (HDOP; a measure of accuracy) for each fix, with up to 20 fix points per day recorded. An initial screening to identify low-accuracy fixes focused on those locations with large HDOP values (⩾10 for Sirtrack collars, ⩾30 for homebuilt collars) [Reference Recio23]. Because this method of screening for inaccurate fixes is also prone to discarding accurate ones [Reference D'Eon and Delparte24, Reference Lewis25], we visually assessed fixes with high HDOP in relation to the previous and subsequent 10 locations for that animal. If the fix with high HDOP was located within the vicinity of the other locations, it was considered to be biologically reasonable and retained for analysis, otherwise it was discarded.
For ferrets, and for one set of possums (n = 29), tracking data were obtained via VHF telemetry only, by attempting to locate each animal during the day at 6- to 8-week intervals between March 2005 and March 2006, either by an observer on foot or from a helicopter. For cattle, deer, pigs, and a second set of possums (n = 27), more detailed location data were obtained by GPS to obtain multiple fixes per day for each animal. The GPS data were collected over a 6-month period for possums (between September 2009 and February 2010); and over 14-month periods for wild red deer, free-ranging cattle and feral pigs (between May 2009 and July 2010 for feral pigs, September 2009 and October 2010 for cattle, and between January 2010 and February 2011 for deer).
Spatial analyses
Location data were used to estimate home ranges using either a 100% minimum convex polygon (MCP) or a 95% isopleth fixed-kernel density estimator (KDE). Both analyses were conducted in Home Range Tools for ArcGIS [Reference Rodgers26], using least-squares cross-validation to estimate the smoothing factor h for KDEs [Reference Seaman and Powell27, Reference Gitzen, Millspaugh and Kernohan28]. All spatial analyses were performed using ArcGIS v. 9.3 [29].
In addition to estimating overall home ranges for all five species, we also investigated the short-term temporal patterns of home-range utilization by individuals of four species (cattle, deer, pigs, possums) tracked by GPS, by focusing on animals for which we had four consecutive months of observations with at least one fix per day and a minimum of 40 fixes per month [Reference Seaman30, Reference Börger31]. We calculated 95% KDE-based home-range estimates over the total 4-month period for each individual; then, we further assessed home-range size estimates for each animal over shorter periods by progressively truncating the length of its monitoring period from 4 months' worth of data to the first 3 months of monitoring, then 2 months, 1 month, 3 weeks, 2 weeks and finally to 1 week (see Results section, Fig. 2). In all cases, we selected these periods (4 months to 1 week) from the same broad seasonal time-span [i.e. spring (September) until mid-summer (February)] to minimize effects of inter-species variability due to seasonality. We then used these data to assess the rapidity by which each species increases its utilization of the total recorded 4-month range.
In a subtly different analysis, we aimed to assess the proportion of the estimated 4-month home range that each individual animal might utilize during any given week or month within that 4-month monitoring period, rather than just the first week or first 4 weeks of its data; this was to provide an indication of average percentage utilization of total range. To achieve this, shorter time blocks of 1 week (16 blocks) and 4 weeks (four blocks) were identified within the 4-month period, and used to estimate area size for any given 1-week or 4-week block; average weekly and monthly percentage utilization within the 4 months was then calculated as the average for each block (see Results section, Fig. 3).
RESULTS
Home-range sizes
We obtained tracking data for 117 individual mammals in this study (Table 1). We obtained at least 20 locational fixes via GPS from 23 cattle, 13 deer, 13 pigs and 27 possums and used these data to provide KDE-based home-range estimates. We collected smaller sets of locational fixes via VHF telemetry for a further 29 possums and 12 ferrets, and used these data to provide MCP-based home-range estimates (Table 1, Fig. 1).
Data represent mean home-range estimates (95% confidence intervals) for each species. Analyses are based on 95% isopleth kernel density estimator calculations for cattle, deer, pigs and possums I, and on 100% minimum complex polygons calculations for possums II and ferrets.
Possums I monitored by GPS (which provided 24-hourly fix points per day); Possums II monitored by VHF telemetry (which gave only daytime, i.e. denning site, fix points).
There was wide variation within and between species in the estimates of home-range size, with (for each species) the estimated area covered by males tending to be larger than females (Fig. 1). Cattle and deer had very large home ranges, with some individuals covering over 60 km2. Possums had the smallest home ranges, an average of 22·3 ha estimated from GPS data (based on 95% KDE) and 5·14 ha estimated from VHF telemetry fixes (100% MCP). The differences between these two estimates reflects the fact that GPS provided multiple fixes for 24 h per day, whereas VHF telemetry data could only be obtained during daylight hours, when strictly nocturnal possums were in daytime dens.
Temporal patterns in home-range utilization
We had a minimum of 4 months' worth of contiguous fix data for 21 cattle, four deer, five pigs and 20 possums. All four species showed a similar pattern of covering progressively larger areas over time, but with most of the increase occurring during the first 2 months of the monitoring period (Fig. 2). For possums, range expansion appeared to cease at 1–2 months, whereas pigs showed progressive range expansion from 1 week up to 4 months of monitoring; deer and cattle showed an intermediate pattern.
All four species demonstrated short term (weekly and monthly) utilization of a seasonal range that was more or less consistent, with some minor variations (Fig. 3). Cattle, deer and pigs, for example, used less than half (45%, 37%, 43%, respectively) of their 4-month range within 1 week, while possums used 62% of their 4-month range within 1 week and 85% of it within 4 weeks.
In addition to weekly and monthly analyses for proportional utilization of seasonal range, we also had sufficient data to assess daily range utilization, but for possums only: on average, possum daily ranges were 6·0 ha (range 0·8–18·8 ha, n = 20), equivalent to 26% (range 11–66%) of the possums' 4-monthly home-range size.
DISCUSSION
Home-range size
This study permitted, for the first time, a direct comparison of home-range utilization by the five main New Zealand hosts of bovine TB that is not confounded by major differences in habitat type. The findings are generally consistent with previous studies of wildlife in New Zealand, with possums having small home ranges (generally <30 ha), and red deer, pigs, and ferrets having ranges 1–2 orders of magnitude larger. In our study, the all-male cattle covered an average range of over 30 km2 in this mountainous dry grass/scrubland habitat, a value somewhat higher than previous reports of range movements for free-ranging cattle grazing high-altitude meadows and forest margins in the western United States (e.g. 0·7–3·3 km2 [Reference Howery32] and 9·2 km2 [Reference Roath and Krueger33]). In common with cattle, the home-range sizes we recorded here for wild red deer (38 km2) are towards the upper extreme of values reported previously. They are more akin to the large ranges reported for deer in old-growth forest in Poland (adult male ranges of 36·0 km2, adult females 8·4 km2 [Reference Kamler, Jędrzejewska and Jędrzejewski34]) than to those in largely unforested Scottish Highlands (which are ostensibly similar to our dry grass/scrubland habitat), where females' home ranges average between 100 ha and 500 ha [Reference Clutton-Brock and Albon35] or in the Bavarian Alps where seasonal range sizes of 65–171 ha were recorded for non-migratory female deer [Reference Georgii and Schroder36]. Similarly, the possum range sizes recorded in this study (average 22·3 ha by GPS monitoring) are larger than the typical 1–5 ha ranges observed in more favourable habitats such as broadleaved forests, but are similar to those of possums in semi-arid land with sparse vegetation elsewhere in New Zealand [Reference Cowan, Clout and Montague10, Reference Glen19]. In contrast, the pigs in this study occupied areas of only a few hundred hectares, whereas pigs monitored in tussock grassland/scrub habitat in the Pisa Range (Central Otago, South Island of New Zealand) varied their habitat coverage between 550 ha and 15 700 ha [Reference Knowles37]. Pigs can utilize relatively small areas when food and cover are adequate, such as the range sizes of just 28–209 ha recorded for pigs in rough pasture/beech forest habitat at Murchison, ∼100 km northwest of our study area [Reference McIlroy38]. Ferrets in this study covered an average range size of 104 ha, and had the largest disparity in range sizes between the sexes of any of the five species studied (males covered, on average, 3·5 times the area covered by females). Ferret home-range sizes in New Zealand have previously been recorded between 12 ha and >200 ha [Reference Norbury, Norbury and Heyward39], with larger ranges in semi-arid pastureland holding moderate to high densities of rabbits as a major prey source.
Temporal utilization of home ranges in relation to TB risk
This study was prompted primarily by the need to help refine a new approach to wildlife disease surveillance in New Zealand to determine whether intensive culling of possum populations has successfully eliminated TB from possum populations so that control can be stopped [Reference Hutchings, Hancox and Livingstone9]. This new approach [Reference Anderson17, Reference Bosson18] is based on spatially explicit modelling of TB detection probabilities, using either sentinel species, possums themselves, or possum surveillance devices. However, the home-range data available to parameterize the TB detection kernel models are suboptimal in terms of there being few data for some species (particularly pigs, deer and cattle), and with the relative differences in range size between species being confounded by the data being from different habitats.
In general, animal-ranging studies usually report movement data on the basis of annual range size. However, in the context of defining disease detection kernels in susceptible TB host species, the relevant home-range size estimate should, intuitively, be related to the time-frame over which a sentinel is at risk of becoming infected (in the New Zealand case, by transmission from possums). Possums with clinical disease and externally detectable TB symptoms survive for only about 4 months, on average [Reference Ramsey and Cowan40, Reference Norton, Corner and Morris41]; further, recent research [Reference Nugent42] has shown that very few artificially infected possums survive for more than 6 months, and that the period when a tuberculous possum is most likely to be exhibiting gross tuberculous pathology (and is therefore most likely to be infectious to other animals) is unlikely to be longer than ∼4 months. On this basis, we suggest that a 4-month home-range size estimate would be the most appropriate parameter for setting detection kernel size when possums are used as sentinels for detecting TB in other possums.
That logic can be extended to the other possum/TB detection systems currently being employed, namely leg-hold trapping for monitoring possums and interference devices for monitoring possum activity (Chew cards [Reference Sweetapple and Nugent43]). For traps, the possum detection probabilities that underpin the TB detection kernels derived from them are based on the probability of capture of an individual possum per trap per night [Reference Ball44], but in practice these traps are set for three consecutive nights. Chew cards are usually set for a week-long period in the field as surveillance devices. These detection systems therefore provide insight into where a TB possum might have been during the course of 3–7 days. As our results indicate that the weekly home-range sizes of possums average only about 60% of their 4-month range sizes, this suggests that using the latter as the basis for detection kernel estimation could overstate the TB surveillance coverage provided by the device. Countering that, however, the estimates of detection probability currently used in surveillance-based modelling tend to have been derived using home-range values based on longer-period estimates – for example, Ball et al. [Reference Ball44] have reported a 5-month possum range size for this purpose. This automatically compensates for the bias, in that although the coverage provided by an individual trap may be overstated, the area-wide estimate of TB detection probability remains unbiased.
With regard to other sentinel species, the period over which a TB spillover host may become infected varies according to how transmission occurs. For pigs and ferrets, M. bovis transmission is likely to occur by the scavenging of carcasses of dead tuberculous possums [Reference Caley and Hone6, Reference Nugent, Whitford and Young11]. The period of infectiousness of the carcass is likely to be temperature-dependent, since environmental conditions affect the survival of M. bovis bacilli in tissues [Reference Barron45]. M. bovis viability in a carcass may be as short as a few days in the height of summer, when carcass decomposition is usually rapid, or up to 2–3 months in the depths of winter, when (in some places) possum carcasses may remain frozen for weeks. We suggest for scavenging species a monthly ranging estimate is probably the most appropriate measure of risk-related home-range size to use in TB detection modelling. Our results for pigs suggest, for the present study area at least, a home-range size of about 1·7 km2 is appropriate for that species. For deer and cattle, transmission of M. bovis is believed to occur most frequently via their direct interaction with either moribund possums in the short terminal stages of disease, or with recently dead animals, via inquisitiveness [Reference Paterson and Morris46, Reference Sauter and Morris47]; these are both periods when tuberculous possums are likely to be shedding M. bovis bacilli via draining sinus tracts from necrotic peripheral lymph nodes [Reference Nugent42, Reference Nugent48], which is a common feature of clinical TB in possums [Reference Coleman49, Reference Cooke50]. If the window of possum–deer/cattle infectiousness is indeed only a few days either side of possum death, we suggest that if these species are used as sentinels, then a weekly range size is likely to be the most appropriate measure of their spatial coverage as TB sentinels – equating to approximately 9 km2 for the free ranging cattle and 11 km2 for the deer in our study.
In summary, we argue that the period during which the presence of a tuberculous possum can be detected (either by direct surveillance of possums using detection-and-capture devices, or by indirect surveillance using spillover hosts as sentinels) is always likely to be much shorter than a year, and that the length of this detection window is likely to vary widely between species. The spatial scale of the surveillance coverage provided by the different sentinel species will therefore depend not only on differences in their long-term home-range sizes, but on how much of the estimated total range is used on a weekly or monthly basis (which our results show can often be only half to three quarters as large). Moreover, future estimates of TB detection probabilities for possum capture/detection devices should be calculated using the appropriate short-term home-range size, which should enable more accurate representation of surveillance coverage.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL
For supplementary material accompanying this paper visit http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0950268813000289.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We thank Landcare Research field staff for excellent technical assistance throughout these studies. We also thank Dr Phil Cowan and Dr Dean Anderson (Landcare Research) for reviewing an earlier draft of this manuscript. The protocols followed in this research were approved by the Animal Ethics Committee of Landcare Research. This work was funded by the Animal Health Board in New Zealand.
DECLARATION OF INTEREST
None.