Using simulation modeling to inform management of invasive species: A case study of eastern brook trout suppression and eradication
Authored by Erin L Landguth, Casey C Day, Andrew Bearlin, Zachary A Holden, Andrew R Whiteley
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2018.01.017
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Abstract
Ecosystem impacts due to invasive species continue to attract
significant conservation effort worldwide. In aquatic ecosystems,
physical interventions such as suppression and eradication of non-native
species are typically expensive, long-term commitments, with few
examples of lasting success in the absence of significant ongoing
effort. Control of non-native species is a major conservation and
restoration challenge, as a species' demographic resilience and
connectivity within networks can limit the ability of suppression or
eradication efforts to influence populations. Simulation tools can
provide valuable insights for the management of these systems - from
evaluation of tradeoffs between time and effort to prediction of
relative success rates of alternative strategies In changing
environments. In the Pacific Northwest region of the U.S., the eastern
brook trout (EBT; Salvelinus fontinalis) is a non-native invasive
species that competes with native fish species across a wide spatial
scale due to extensive human-mediated introduction starting in the early
20th century. The goal of this study was to simulate the individual
movement and demographics of EBT before, during, and following
implementation of control efforts in tributaries within the Pend Oreille
River watershed. The ultimate purpose of the model was to inform
mitigation decisions through the investigation of alternative management
actions in an adaptive management framework. Our results indicate that
eradication of EBT is improbable in large systems via electrofishing,
but suppression is a viable alternative given sustained management
efforts. Changes to scheduling, effort, and length of electrofishing
suppression treatments had minimal effects on EBT population recovery
times. We reproduced the effects of compensatory responses to control
treatments, including increases in juvenile survival and emigration
rates, and demonstrated that these mechanisms are likely drivers of
recovery following treatment. Our study highlights the many benefits of
incorporating spatially explicit, individual-based models into
management plans for the control of invasive species.
Tags
Dynamics
movement
movements
population
landscape ecology
habitat
Strategies
Temperature
Removal
Stream
Cdmetapop
Compensatory response
Electrofishing
Ibm individual-based
Salvelinus fontinalis
Native cutthroat trout
Bull trout