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Rodent composition, population and damages of subsistence farms in selected local

Rodents are main causes of huge crop losses in most field and stored produce of all vertebrate pests of agricultural importance in developing countries. Information on the damages caused by rodents in Oyo State, Nigeria is largely obsolete and poorly documented. The study was carried out in five pur...

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Format: Conference Proceeding
Published: 2020
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LEADER 00000njm a2000000a 4500
001 oai:repository.ui.edu.ng:123456789/10667
042 |a dc 
720 |a Asunbo O. I.  |e author 
720 |a Olubode O.S.  |e author 
260 |c 2020 
520 |a Rodents are main causes of huge crop losses in most field and stored produce of all vertebrate pests of agricultural importance in developing countries. Information on the damages caused by rodents in Oyo State, Nigeria is largely obsolete and poorly documented. The study was carried out in five purposively selected agrarian local government areas (LGAs) - Ibarapa North, Ibarapa Central, Ibarapa East, Lagelu, and Iddo local governments - in Oyo state, Nigeria. Fifty Structured questionnaires were used to randomly assess knowledge of farmers in Oyo State Agricultural Development Programme on rodents and their importance in each LGA. Kill traps were used to estimate population density of rodents in the study area over a 14-week period. All data were descriptively analysed. Cricetomys gambianus, Mus musculus, Sciurus carolinensis, Xerus erythropus, Oryctolagus cuniculus, and Rattus rattus were identified as pests of crops in the study area. High rodent damage ratings were recorded in maize in all LGAs, with infestation rating in Ibarapa East being (2.5), Ibarapa Central LGA (2.0), Iddo (2.5), Lagelu (3.0), Ibarapa North (2.5). Lowest damages were reported in pineapple (Range: 0.0 -.0.5). In storage, maize, cocoyam, cassava, oil palm kernels, yam and pineapple were mostly affected. Rodent density estimates ranged from 22 to 174/ha at Lagelu, 30 to 923/ha at Ibarapa Central, and 85 to 167/ha at Iddo. The inter-connectivity resulting from incomplete land fragmentation made management and control of rodents difficult. Farmers are encouraged to synchronize their management and control strategies in time and space, while the government includes rodent management in agricultural programme packages. 
024 8 |a Proceedings of 7th NSCB Biodiversity Conference Pp174-181 
024 8 |a https://repository.ui.edu.ng/handle/123456789/10667 
653 |a Rodent infestation 
653 |a Rodent population 
653 |a Subsistence agriculture 
653 |a Vertebrate pests 
245 0 0 |a Rodent composition, population and damages of subsistence farms in selected local