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Risk-based management of invading plant disease

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Hyatt-Twynam, SR 
Parnell, S 
Stutt, ROJH 
Gottwald, TR 
Gilligan, CA 

Abstract

  • Effective control of plant disease remains a key challenge. Eradication attempts often involve removal of host plants within a certain radius of detection, targeting asymptomatic infection. Here we develop and test potentially more effective, epidemiologically motivated, control strategies, using a mathematical model previously fitted to the spread of citrus canker in Florida.
  • We test risk-based control, which preferentially removes hosts expected to cause a high number of infections in the remaining host population. Removals then depend on past patterns of pathogen spread and host removal, which might be nontransparent to affected stakeholders. This motivates a variable radius strategy, which approximates risk-based control via removal radii that vary by location, but which are fixed in advance of any epidemic.
  • Risk-based control outperforms variable radius control, which in turn outperforms constant radius removal. This result is robust to changes in disease spread parameters and initial patterns of susceptible host plants. However, efficiency degrades if epidemiological parameters are incorrectly characterised.
  • Risk-based control including additional epidemiology can be used to improve disease management, but it requires good prior knowledge for optimal performance. This focuses attention on gaining maximal information from past epidemics, on understanding model transferability between locations and on adaptive management strategies that change over time.

Description

Keywords

adaptive control, citrus canker, disease management, eradication, risk-based control, stakeholders, stochastic epidemic model

Journal Title

New Phytologist

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0028-646X
1469-8137

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley
Sponsorship
Part of this work was funded by the USDA-APHIS Farm Bill; C.A.G. acknowledges support from USDA-APHIS.