4.4 Article

Controlling the Spatial Spread of a Xylella Epidemic

期刊

BULLETIN OF MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY
卷 83, 期 4, 页码 -

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11538-021-00861-z

关键词

Xylella fastidiosa; Olive trees; Epidemics; Mathematical model; Reaction-diffusion models; Numerical simulations; Control strategies; Regional control; 35-XX; 35B40; 37N25; 92C80; 92D30; 92D40; 93B99

资金

  1. Universita degli Studi di Milano

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The research presents a simple model to describe the spread of Olive Quick Decline Syndrome and identifies possible strategies to control the epidemic. Numerical simulations support the model, showing that removing weed biomass and adopting more resistant olive tree cultivars can be effective control measures.
In a recent paper by one of the authors and collaborators, motivated by the Olive Quick Decline Syndrome (OQDS) outbreak, which has been ongoing in Southern Italy since 2013, a simple epidemiological model describing this epidemic was presented. Beside the bacterium Xylella fastidiosa, the main players considered in the model are its insect vectors, Philaenus spumarius, and the host plants (olive trees and weeds) of the insects and of the bacterium. The model was based on a system of ordinary differential equations, the analysis of which provided interesting results about possible equilibria of the epidemic system and guidelines for its numerical simulations. Although the model presented there was mathematically rather simplified, its analysis has highlighted threshold parameters that could be the target of control strategies within an integrated pest management framework, not requiring the removal of the productive resource represented by the olive trees. Indeed, numerical simulations support the outcomes of the mathematical analysis, according to which the removal of a suitable amount of weed biomass (reservoir of Xylella fastidiosa) from olive orchards and surrounding areas resulted in the most efficient strategy to control the spread of the OQDS. In addition, as expected, the adoption of more resistant olive tree cultivars has been shown to be a good strategy, though less cost-effective, in controlling the pathogen. In this paper for a more realistic description and a clearer interpretation of the proposed control measures, a spatial structure of the epidemic system has been included, but, in order to keep mathematical technicalities to a minimum, only two players have been described in a dynamical way, trees and insects, while the weed biomass is taken to be a given quantity. The control measures have been introduced only on a subregion of the whole habitat, in order to contain costs of intervention. We show that such a practice can lead to the eradication of an epidemic outbreak. Numerical simulations confirm both the results of the previous paper and the theoretical results of the model with a spatial structure, though subject to regional control only.

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