The area covering South Ronaldsay, Burray, Glimps Holm, Lamb Holm, and all of East Mainland will this week see a move away from checking the current trap network and instead into intense effort to find remaining stoats based on sightings, information from detection dog searches and targeting known hotspots.
This is an extension of the 2022 trial in Deerness but over a much larger area and in addition to using the techniques honed during the previous trial will also test cutting edge technology that has been successfully used to track down invasive species in New Zealand.
Communities living in these areas might notice the change as they may see project staff in the same area on consecutive days as they respond to sightings and deploy new traps, notice different styles of trap housing appear and see more frequent dog searches too.
Rapid and detailed reports of sightings of any potential stoat are particularly important. While rapid reporting of sightings is the most important, ideally within 24 hours or less as the quicker a stoat is reported the more likely it is to be caught, the project team also stress that the more information that is provided the better. Sightings with details of the exact location, what the stoats were doing and where they were moving between and ones that are accompanied by photos or video are the most useful in helping the team quickly find and remove remaining stoats.
New technology will also be trialled this year including a new type of remote camera that is triggered by thermal radiation not just movement and uses Artificial Intelligence to sift images before alerting the team to possible stoats via text message, hand-held thermal telescopes, and drones with thermal imaging capacity. If successful, these technologies will work alongside dog searches and public sightings to help track down remaining stoats.
The project team are testing these new technologies to see how they can help pinpoint the locations of the remaining stoats and whether they may even be useful in areas where landowners are hesitant to allow dogs and project staff on their land.