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Cost-Effective Suppression and Eradication of Invasive Predators
Authors:PETER W J BAXTER†‡††  JOHN L SABO§  CHRIS WILCOX‡  MICHAEL A McCARTHY    HUGH P POSSINGHAM‡
Institution:School of Botany, University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC 3010, Australia;Australian Research Centre for Urban Ecology, Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne, c/o School of Botany, University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC 3010, Australia;The Ecology Centre and The Applied Environmental Decision Analysis Centre, School of Integrative Biology, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia;Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Science, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, P.O. Box 871501, Tempe, AZ 85287-4501, U.S.A.;Pelagic Fisheries and Ecosystems, CSIRO Marine Research, Castray Esplanade, Hobart, TAS 7000, Australia
Abstract:Abstract: Introduced predators can have pronounced effects on naïve prey species; thus, predator control is often essential for conservation of threatened native species. Complete eradication of the predator, although desirable, may be elusive in budget‐limited situations, whereas predator suppression is more feasible and may still achieve conservation goals. We used a stochastic predator–prey model based on a Lotka‐Volterra system to investigate the cost‐effectiveness of predator control to achieve prey conservation. We compared five control strategies: immediate eradication, removal of a constant number of predators (fixed‐number control), removal of a constant proportion of predators (fixed‐rate control), removal of predators that exceed a predetermined threshold (upper‐trigger harvest), and removal of predators whenever their population falls below a lower predetermined threshold (lower‐trigger harvest). We looked at the performance of these strategies when managers could always remove the full number of predators targeted by each strategy, subject to budget availability. Under this assumption immediate eradication reduced the threat to the prey population the most. We then examined the effect of reduced management success in meeting removal targets, assuming removal is more difficult at low predator densities. In this case there was a pronounced reduction in performance of the immediate eradication, fixed‐number, and lower‐trigger strategies. Although immediate eradication still yielded the highest expected minimum prey population size, upper‐trigger harvest yielded the lowest probability of prey extinction and the greatest return on investment (as measured by improvement in expected minimum population size per amount spent). Upper‐trigger harvest was relatively successful because it operated when predator density was highest, which is when predator removal targets can be more easily met and the effect of predators on the prey is most damaging. This suggests that controlling predators only when they are most abundant is the “best” strategy when financial resources are limited and eradication is unlikely.
Keywords:introduced species  management efficiency  pest eradication  predator control  predator–prey model  process error  suppression of invasive species  trigger harvest
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