McKee Gregory J, Goodhue Rachael E, Zalom Frank G, Carter Colin A, Chalfant James A
Department of Agribusiness and Applied Economics, North Dakota State University, 205 A Morrill Hall, Fargo, ND 58102, USA.
J Environ Manage. 2009 Jan;90(1):561-70. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2007.12.011. Epub 2008 Jan 22.
In agriculture, relatively few efficacious control measures may be available for an invasive pest. In the case of a new insect pest, insecticide use decisions are affected by regulations associated with its registration, insect population dynamics, and seasonal market price cycles. We assess the costs and benefits of environmental regulations designed to regulate insecticide applications on an invasive species. We construct a bioeconomic model, based on detailed scientific data, of management decisions for a specific invasion: greenhouse whiteflies in California-grown strawberries. The empirical model integrates whitefly population dynamics, the effect of whitefly feeding on strawberry yields, and weekly strawberry price. We use the model to assess the optimality of alternative treatment programs on a simulated greenhouse whitefly population. Our results show that regulations may lead growers to "under-spray" when placed in an economic context, and provide some general lessons about the design of optimal invasive species control policies.
在农业领域,针对入侵性害虫,有效的控制措施可能相对较少。对于新出现的害虫,杀虫剂使用决策会受到与其注册相关的法规、昆虫种群动态以及季节性市场价格周期的影响。我们评估旨在规范对入侵物种使用杀虫剂的环境法规的成本和效益。基于详细的科学数据,我们构建了一个生物经济模型,用于特定入侵事件(加利福尼亚州种植的草莓中的温室白粉虱)的管理决策。该实证模型整合了白粉虱种群动态、白粉虱取食对草莓产量的影响以及每周的草莓价格。我们使用该模型评估针对模拟的温室白粉虱种群的替代处理方案的最优性。我们的结果表明,在经济背景下,法规可能导致种植者“喷洒不足”,并为最优入侵物种控制政策的设计提供一些一般性经验教训。