Genetic engineering to eradicate invasive mice on islands: modeling the efficiency and ecological impacts

Abstract Invasive rodents are usually eradicated from islands through the application of chemical toxicants that can harm surrounding ecosystems. A recently proposed alternative involves engineering a house mouse (Mus musculus) to carry a genetic construct that would cause a majority of its offsprin...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gregory A. Backus, Kevin Gross
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2016-12-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Mus
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.1589
id doaj-99e32a8b0ab24e27b29be20c0b331aa2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-99e32a8b0ab24e27b29be20c0b331aa22020-11-25T01:55:20ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252016-12-01712n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.1589Genetic engineering to eradicate invasive mice on islands: modeling the efficiency and ecological impactsGregory A. Backus0Kevin Gross1Biomathematics Program North Carolina State University Box 8213 Raleigh North Carolina 27695‐8213 USABiomathematics Program North Carolina State University Box 8213 Raleigh North Carolina 27695‐8213 USAAbstract Invasive rodents are usually eradicated from islands through the application of chemical toxicants that can harm surrounding ecosystems. A recently proposed alternative involves engineering a house mouse (Mus musculus) to carry a genetic construct that would cause a majority of its offspring to be male, many of which would be sterile. Releasing these genetically engineered mice to interbreed with an invasive population would reduce the number of fertile female mice until no more remain. We constructed a mathematical model to analyze the population dynamics of eradication with this genetically engineered mouse and determined its eradication efficiency through model analysis and simulations. Because genetically engineered mice would likely have a fitness disadvantage compared to wild mice, we found that they would need to be repeatedly released into the population to ensure complete eradication. However, if genetically engineered mice have a substantial survival advantage, we determined that the genetic construct could theoretically spread and eradicate a population after a single pulsed release onto the target island or after an engineered mouse escapes to a non‐target location. Also, while the species specificity of genetic engineering avoids some of the non‐target impacts of traditional eradication methods, ecological impacts could manifest indirectly. We compared several metrics to estimate potential transient impacts on the ecosystem and found that there is a trade‐off between the speed of an eradication and the intensity of increased disruptive ecological interactions. Together, our results can inform safe and efficient ecological practices for eradication with developing genetic engineering technology.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.1589eradicationgene drivegenetic engineeringinvasive speciesmathematical modelingMus
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gregory A. Backus
Kevin Gross
spellingShingle Gregory A. Backus
Kevin Gross
Genetic engineering to eradicate invasive mice on islands: modeling the efficiency and ecological impacts
Ecosphere
eradication
gene drive
genetic engineering
invasive species
mathematical modeling
Mus
author_facet Gregory A. Backus
Kevin Gross
author_sort Gregory A. Backus
title Genetic engineering to eradicate invasive mice on islands: modeling the efficiency and ecological impacts
title_short Genetic engineering to eradicate invasive mice on islands: modeling the efficiency and ecological impacts
title_full Genetic engineering to eradicate invasive mice on islands: modeling the efficiency and ecological impacts
title_fullStr Genetic engineering to eradicate invasive mice on islands: modeling the efficiency and ecological impacts
title_full_unstemmed Genetic engineering to eradicate invasive mice on islands: modeling the efficiency and ecological impacts
title_sort genetic engineering to eradicate invasive mice on islands: modeling the efficiency and ecological impacts
publisher Wiley
series Ecosphere
issn 2150-8925
publishDate 2016-12-01
description Abstract Invasive rodents are usually eradicated from islands through the application of chemical toxicants that can harm surrounding ecosystems. A recently proposed alternative involves engineering a house mouse (Mus musculus) to carry a genetic construct that would cause a majority of its offspring to be male, many of which would be sterile. Releasing these genetically engineered mice to interbreed with an invasive population would reduce the number of fertile female mice until no more remain. We constructed a mathematical model to analyze the population dynamics of eradication with this genetically engineered mouse and determined its eradication efficiency through model analysis and simulations. Because genetically engineered mice would likely have a fitness disadvantage compared to wild mice, we found that they would need to be repeatedly released into the population to ensure complete eradication. However, if genetically engineered mice have a substantial survival advantage, we determined that the genetic construct could theoretically spread and eradicate a population after a single pulsed release onto the target island or after an engineered mouse escapes to a non‐target location. Also, while the species specificity of genetic engineering avoids some of the non‐target impacts of traditional eradication methods, ecological impacts could manifest indirectly. We compared several metrics to estimate potential transient impacts on the ecosystem and found that there is a trade‐off between the speed of an eradication and the intensity of increased disruptive ecological interactions. Together, our results can inform safe and efficient ecological practices for eradication with developing genetic engineering technology.
topic eradication
gene drive
genetic engineering
invasive species
mathematical modeling
Mus
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.1589
work_keys_str_mv AT gregoryabackus geneticengineeringtoeradicateinvasivemiceonislandsmodelingtheefficiencyandecologicalimpacts
AT kevingross geneticengineeringtoeradicateinvasivemiceonislandsmodelingtheefficiencyandecologicalimpacts
_version_ 1724983823268052992