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- Title
Invasive species management in two-patch environments: agricultural damage control in the raccoon ( Procyon lotor) problem, Hokkaido, Japan.
- Authors
Kotani, Koji; Ishii, Hiromasa; Matsuda, Hiroyuki; Ikeda, Tohru
- Abstract
We develop discrete-time models for analyzing the long-run equilibrium outcomes on invasive species management in two-patch environments with migration. In particular, the focus is on a situation where removal operations for invasive species are implemented only in one patch (controlled patch). The new features of the model are that (1) asymmetry in density-dependent migration is considered, which may originate from impact of harvesting as well as heterogeneous habitat conditions, and (2) the effect of density-dependent catchability accounts for the fact that the required effort level to remove one individual may rise as the existing population decreases. The model is applied to agricultural damage control in the raccoon ( Procyon lotor) problem that has occurred in Hokkaido, Japan. Numerical illustrations demonstrate that the long-run equilibrium outcomes largely depend on the degree of asymmetry in migration as well as the sensitivity of catchability in response to a change in the population size of the invasive species. Furthermore, we characterize the conditions under which the economically optimal effort levels are qualitatively affected by the above two factors, and conclude that aiming at local extermination of invasive species in the controlled patch is justified.
- Subjects
HOKKAIDO (Japan); JAPAN; HABITATS; PEST control; RACCOON; ENVIRONMENTAL management; POPULATION; EMIGRATION &; immigration; ECOLOGY
- Publication
Population Ecology, 2009, Vol 51, Issue 4, p493
- ISSN
1438-3896
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10144-009-0153-5