| Literature DB >> 28611440 |
Yoshiko Sakamoto1, Naoki H Kumagai2, Koichi Goka2.
Abstract
Determining the success of eradication of an invasive species requires a way to decide when its risk of reoccurrence has become acceptably low. In Japan, the area populated by the Argentine ant, Linepithema humile (Mayr), is expanding, and eradication via chemical treatment is ongoing at various locations. One such program in Tokyo was apparently successful, because the ant population decreased to undetectable levels within a short time. However, construction of a population model for management purposes was difficult because the probability of detecting ants decreases rapidly as the population collapses. To predict the time when the ant was eradicated, we developed a multinomial-mixture model for chemical eradication based on monthly trapping data and the history of pesticide applications. We decided when to declare that eradication had been successful by considering both 'eradication' times, which we associated with eradication probabilities of 95% and 99%, and an optimal stopping time based on a 'minimum expected economic cost' that considered the possibility that surveys were stopped too soon. By applying these criteria, we retroactively declared that Argentine ants had been eradicated 38-42 months after the start of treatments (16-17 months after the last sighting).Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28611440 PMCID: PMC5469785 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-03516-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Changes in the estimated number of Argentine ants with the number of surveys. Dark-coloured curves indicate posterior means. Shading indicates the 95% credible intervals.
Month and time details in the eradication program of Argentine ants.
| Tokai | Jonan | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| months | time | months | time | |
| Start of administering pesticide | Apr 2011 | Apr 2011 / Mar 2012* | ||
| Maximum period of detecting the ant | 21 | Dec 2012 | 26 | May 2013 |
| Last observation of the ant | Dec 2012 | May 2013/Dec 2013* | ||
| 95% eradication for chemical control | 33 | Dec 2013 | 36 | Feb 2015* |
| 99% eradication for chemical control | 38 | May 2014 | 42 | Aug 2015* |
| 95% eradication in original | 33 | Dec 2013 | 36 | Feb 2015* |
| 99% eradication in original | 38 | May 2014 | 41 | Jul 2015* |
| Optiimal duration for minimum expected cost | 33 | Dec 2013 | 36 | Feb 2015* |
*A plot of Jonan (Plot I) where administering pesticide was late due to another experiment.
Figure 2Posterior probabilities of the estimated occurrence of Argentine ants versus the number of surveys at the Tokai and Jonan sites. Dashed lines indicate posterior probabilities of 0.01 and 0.05.
Figure 3The net expected cost of declaring eradication versus the number of months after the last ant sighting (solid coloured curves) if management continued as usual, but no more ants were detected. The current monthly cost of management (Cs) is JPY 40,000, and we assumed that the costs of declaring eradication were 59.8 and 87.9 times the monthly monitoring cost at (a) Tokai and (b) Jonan, respectively. The dotted lines indicate results for 5 different cost ratios.