Laurinne J Balstad, Sean C Godwin, Martin Krkošek, Mark A Lewis, Marissa L Baskett
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Mitigating negative downstream impacts of parasitic disease in aquaculture settings entails tradeoffs: reducing parasite loads has economic and conservation benefits, but treatment is often expensive and frequent treatment can lead to resistance evolution. Options for mitigating these potential trade-offs depend on the management context. For example, in the sea louse-salmon system, managers use discrete treatment applications to control louse burdens, applying treatment when parasite burdens exceed a target threshold. To analyze the effect of a threshold-based control of disease treatment on economic, conservation, and evolutionary outcomes, we incorporate discrete treatment into a dynamical model of sea louse-salmon systems with disease spillover to wild populations. The model follows both salmon hosts and sea lice through domestic, wild, and migratory populations, with treatment occurring when sea lice exceed a target threshold. Our model shows that simultaneous economic and conservation win-wins are possible: there are treatment threshold choices that lead to relatively high wild juvenile salmon population sizes and relatively low economic losses, especially when treatment is very effective or treatment is cheap. However, positive evolutionary outcomes are harder to capture and occur most often when treatment efficacy is low and the treatment threshold is either near zero or very high. Expanding the management toolbox beyond choices of treatment threshold and treatment efficacy could help managers better capture positive economic, evolutionary and conservation outcomes in the system.
期刊介绍:
Theoretical Ecology publishes innovative research in theoretical ecology, broadly defined. Papers should use theoretical approaches to answer questions of ecological interest and appeal to and be readable by a broad audience of ecologists. Work that uses mathematical, statistical, computational, or conceptual approaches is all welcomed, provided that the goal is to increase ecological understanding. Papers that only use existing approaches to analyze data, or are only mathematical analyses that do not further ecological understanding, are not appropriate. Work that bridges disciplinary boundaries, such as the intersection between quantitative social sciences and ecology, or physical influences on ecological processes, will also be particularly welcome.
All areas of theoretical ecology, including ecophysiology, population ecology, behavioral ecology, evolutionary ecology, ecosystem ecology, community ecology, and ecosystem and landscape ecology are all appropriate. Theoretical papers that focus on applied ecological questions are also of particular interest.