The National Allotment Society - National Society of Allotment and Leisure Gardeners Ltd

Free Rodenticide Resistance Testing From CRRU

Free DNA testing for rodenticide resistance in rats and mice is available with the Campaign for Responsible Rodenticide Use. Anticoagulants revolutionised rodent control in the 1950s but some rodents soon became resistant to them. The second-generation anticoagulants were introduced to overcome resistant rodents. But rats and mice resistant to some of these compounds are now widespread in the UK.

The DNA tests are conducted by the Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA), Weybridge, Surrey. In addition to aiding rodenticide choices, Dr Buckle says this collaboration with APHA enables CRRU to fulfil its resistance monitoring commitment under the UK Rodenticide Stewardship Regime.

Chairman Dr Alan Buckle says that without more testing, pest controllers, farmers and gamekeepers could be using products that are ineffective in places where rodents are resistant. “And where resistance genes are still absent,” he adds, “others may be using resistance-breaking products unnecessarily. Only more samples can solve this.”

Details how to collect, store and send samples to APHA can be downloaded HERE and HERE

Leader of CRRU’s Monitoring Work Group Richard Moseley says a serious concern is the almost complete lack of data from central England and most parts of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

In the past two years, new hotspots of rats with resistance genes have been found in Northumberland and County Durham, Tyneside and North Yorkshire, Devon and East Anglia, Greater Manchester and along the River Severn valley from north-west Shropshire to Somerset. Going back a number of years, resistance genes have become widespread across central southern England.

 

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