Optimal control of irrupting pest populations in a climate-driven ecosystem

Irruptions of small consumer populations, driven by pulsed resources, can lead to adverse effects including the decline of indigenous species or increased disease spread. Broad-scale pest management to combat such effects benefits from forecasting of irruptions and an assessment of the optimal contr...

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Main Authors: E Penelope Holland, Rachelle N. Binny, Alex James
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2018-12-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/6146.pdf
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spelling doaj-ed571c6a7a7c474caa569f388ef9d0fc2020-11-24T21:08:15ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592018-12-016e614610.7717/peerj.6146Optimal control of irrupting pest populations in a climate-driven ecosystemE Penelope Holland0Rachelle N. Binny1Alex James2Department of Biology, University of York, York, United KingdomManaaki Whenua Landcare Research, Lincoln, New ZealandBiomathematics Research Centre, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New ZealandIrruptions of small consumer populations, driven by pulsed resources, can lead to adverse effects including the decline of indigenous species or increased disease spread. Broad-scale pest management to combat such effects benefits from forecasting of irruptions and an assessment of the optimal control conditions for minimising consumer abundance. We use a climate-based consumer-resource model to predict irruptions of a pest species (Mus musculus) population in response to masting (episodic synchronous seed production) and extend this model to account for broad-scale pest control of mice using toxic bait. The extended model is used to forecast the magnitude and frequency of pest irruptions under low, moderate and high control levels, and for different timings of control operations. In particular, we assess the optimal control timing required to minimise the frequency with which pests reach ‘plague’ levels, whilst avoiding excessive toxin use. Model predictions suggest the optimal timing for mouse control in beech forest, with respect to minimising plague time, is mid-September. Of the control regimes considered, a seedfall driven biannual-biennial regime gave the greatest reduction in plague time and plague years for low and moderate control levels. Although inspired by a model validated using house mouse populations in New Zealand forests, our modelling approach is easily adapted for application to other climate-driven systems where broad-scale control is conducted on irrupting pest populations.https://peerj.com/articles/6146.pdfConsumer-resource modelMus musculusBroad-scale aerial controlPulsed resourcesMast seedingInvasive species
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author E Penelope Holland
Rachelle N. Binny
Alex James
spellingShingle E Penelope Holland
Rachelle N. Binny
Alex James
Optimal control of irrupting pest populations in a climate-driven ecosystem
PeerJ
Consumer-resource model
Mus musculus
Broad-scale aerial control
Pulsed resources
Mast seeding
Invasive species
author_facet E Penelope Holland
Rachelle N. Binny
Alex James
author_sort E Penelope Holland
title Optimal control of irrupting pest populations in a climate-driven ecosystem
title_short Optimal control of irrupting pest populations in a climate-driven ecosystem
title_full Optimal control of irrupting pest populations in a climate-driven ecosystem
title_fullStr Optimal control of irrupting pest populations in a climate-driven ecosystem
title_full_unstemmed Optimal control of irrupting pest populations in a climate-driven ecosystem
title_sort optimal control of irrupting pest populations in a climate-driven ecosystem
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Irruptions of small consumer populations, driven by pulsed resources, can lead to adverse effects including the decline of indigenous species or increased disease spread. Broad-scale pest management to combat such effects benefits from forecasting of irruptions and an assessment of the optimal control conditions for minimising consumer abundance. We use a climate-based consumer-resource model to predict irruptions of a pest species (Mus musculus) population in response to masting (episodic synchronous seed production) and extend this model to account for broad-scale pest control of mice using toxic bait. The extended model is used to forecast the magnitude and frequency of pest irruptions under low, moderate and high control levels, and for different timings of control operations. In particular, we assess the optimal control timing required to minimise the frequency with which pests reach ‘plague’ levels, whilst avoiding excessive toxin use. Model predictions suggest the optimal timing for mouse control in beech forest, with respect to minimising plague time, is mid-September. Of the control regimes considered, a seedfall driven biannual-biennial regime gave the greatest reduction in plague time and plague years for low and moderate control levels. Although inspired by a model validated using house mouse populations in New Zealand forests, our modelling approach is easily adapted for application to other climate-driven systems where broad-scale control is conducted on irrupting pest populations.
topic Consumer-resource model
Mus musculus
Broad-scale aerial control
Pulsed resources
Mast seeding
Invasive species
url https://peerj.com/articles/6146.pdf
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