4.6 Article

Harvest strategies for the elimination of low prevalence wildlife diseases

Journal

ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.210124

Keywords

chronic wasting disease; selective harvesting; reindeer; Norway; adaptive management

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Intensive harvesting of hosts is often the only practical way to control emerging wildlife diseases, with a focus on eliminating all infected individuals during the early phase of an outbreak. Low and medium harvest intensities are unsuccessful in disease elimination, but high-intensity harvesting may have a high likelihood of success, dependent on disease prevalence. Adaptive management is suggested to address uncertainty in disease prevalence estimates.
The intensive harvesting of hosts is often the only practicable strategy for controlling emerging wildlife diseases. Several harvesting approaches have been explored theoretically with the objective of lowering transmission rates, decreasing the transmission period or specifically targeting spatial disease clusters or high-risk demographic groups. Here, we present a novel model-based approach to evaluate alternative harvest regimes, in terms of demographic composition and rates, intended to increase the probability to remove all infected individuals in the population during the early phase of an outbreak. We tested the utility of the method for the elimination of chronic wasting disease based on empirical data for reindeer (Rangifer tarandus) in Norway, in populations with (Nordfjella) and without (Hardangervidda) knowledge about exact disease prevalence and population abundance. Low and medium harvest intensities were unsuccessful in eliminating the disease, even at low prevalence. High-intensity harvesting had a high likelihood of eliminating the disease, but probability was strongly influenced by the disease prevalence. We suggest that the uncertainty about disease prevalence can be mitigated by using an adaptive management approach: forecast from models after each harvest season with updated data, derive prevalence estimates and forecast further harvesting. We identified the problems arising from disease surveillance with large fluctuations in harvesting pressure and hence sample sizes. The elimination method may be suitable for pathogens that cause long-lasting infections and with slow epidemic growth, but the method should only be attempted if there is a low risk of reinfection, either by a new disease introduction event (e.g. dispersing hosts) or due to environmental reservoirs. Our simulations highlighted the short time window when such a strategy is likely to be successful before approaching near complete eradication of the population.

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