Journal article
Allocating biosecurity resources between preventing, detecting, and eradicating island invasions
TM Rout, JL Moore, HP Possingham, MA McCarthy
Ecological Economics | Published : 2011
Abstract
Finding efficient ways to manage the threat of invasive species helps make the most of limited resources. Different management actions reduce the impact of invasions differently: preventing invasion eliminates impacts entirely, surveillance can facilitate early detection and eradication, and removing individuals can reduce future impact. Few studies have examined the trade-off between all three facets of invasion management. Using a simple model of island invasion, we find how resources should be allocated to each action to minimise the total cost of management and impact. We use a case study of black rat (Rattus rattus) invasion on Barrow Island, Western Australia. The optimal amount to inv..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
Many thanks to Cindy Hauser, David Roberts, Andrew Solow, and four anonymous reviewers for helpful comments that improved this manuscript, and to Dorian Moro for discussion of the Barrow Island case study. This work was supported by an Australian Postgraduate Award, the AEDA Commonwealth Environment Research Facility, the Australian Centre of Excellence for Risk Analysis, and an Australian Research Council Discovery Grant (DP110101499). The Australian Research Council funded HPP as a Federation Fellow.