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No sympathy for the devil
Institution:1. The University of Sydney, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Science, NSW 2006, Australia;2. Department of Anatomy, University of Otago, Great King Street, Dunedin 9016, New Zealand;3. Save the Tasmanian Devil Program, DPIPWE, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia;4. Toledo Zoo, 2605 Broadway, Toledo, OH 43609, USA;5. San Diego Zoo Global, PO Box 120551, San Diego, CA 92112, USA
Abstract:Pathogens are a significant driver of biodiversity loss. We examine two wildlife disease management strategies that have seen growing use, sometimes in combination: (i) trapping-and-culling infectious animals (disease control), and (ii) trapping-and-translocating healthy animals to a reserve, with possible future reintroduction. A reserve can improve conservation when there is no disease. But, when infection exists, we show investing in the reserve may counteract disease control. We find jointly pursuing both strategies is sub-optimal when the reserve is costly to maintain. Numerically, we examine management of Devil Facial Tumor Disease, which has generated extinction risks for Tasmanian Devils. Disease control (though not eradication) is generally part of an optimal strategy, although a reserve is also optimal if it can be maintained costlessly. This implies preserving the original population by addressing in situ conservation risks, rather than translocating animals to a reserve and giving up on the original population, is generally the first-best.
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