Modelling pest dynamics under uncertainty in pest detection: the case of the red palm weevil

A common complication in invasive pest management is that the infectious state of the host can be wrongly assessed, leading to biases in the estimation of the prevalence of the pest and on the efficacy of mitigation actions. We designed a multievent model that accommodates uncertainty on host state...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biological invasions 2020-05, Vol.22 (5), p.1635-1645
Hauptverfasser: Sanz-Aguilar, Ana, Cortés, Iván, Gascón, Inmaculada, Martínez, Olga, Ginard, Santiago, Tavecchia, Giacomo
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container_end_page 1645
container_issue 5
container_start_page 1635
container_title Biological invasions
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creator Sanz-Aguilar, Ana
Cortés, Iván
Gascón, Inmaculada
Martínez, Olga
Ginard, Santiago
Tavecchia, Giacomo
description A common complication in invasive pest management is that the infectious state of the host can be wrongly assessed, leading to biases in the estimation of the prevalence of the pest and on the efficacy of mitigation actions. We designed a multievent model that accommodates uncertainty on host state to investigate the dynamics of the infestation of Phoenix canariensis by the invasive Rhynchophorus ferrugineus . Since 2011, the council of Palma city (Mallorca Island, Spain) applied preventive, curative and destructive treatments to public Phoenix palms. A year later awareness campaigns focused on every palm owner in an attempt to control the plague. We estimated the probability of infestation and assessed the efficiency of mitigation measures, awareness campaigns and palm-dependent covariates. Our results show that infestation probabilities were higher for palms infested in the previous year than for healthy palms and it decreased substantially over time as a results of mitigation measures and awareness campaigns. Palms surrounded by treated palms had a lower probability of being infested than palms surrounded by untreated palms, i.e. private palms before awareness campaigns implementation. Our results highlight the key role of awareness campaigns and public participation for invasive species control.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10530-020-02208-6
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source SpringerLink Journals
subjects Councils
Developmental Biology
Ecology
Efficiency
Freshwater & Marine Ecology
Infestation
Insecticides
Introduced species
Invasive species
Islands
Life Sciences
Original Paper
Pest control
Pests
Phoenix canariensis
Plague
Plant Sciences
Probability
Public participation
Rhynchophorus ferrugineus
Uncertainty
Zoology
title Modelling pest dynamics under uncertainty in pest detection: the case of the red palm weevil
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