Article

Modelling the impact and control of an infectious disease in a plant nursery with infected plant material inputs

Details

Citation

Bate AM, Jones G, Kleczkowski A, MacLeod A, Naylor R, Timmis J, Touza J & White PCL (2016) Modelling the impact and control of an infectious disease in a plant nursery with infected plant material inputs. Ecological Modelling, 334, pp. 27-43. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2016.04.013

Abstract
The ornamental plant trade has been identified as a key introduction pathway for plant pathogens. Establishing effective biosecurity measures to reduce the risk of plant pathogen outbreaks in the live plant trade is therefore important. Management of invasive pathogens has been identified as a weakest link public good, and thus is reliant on the actions of individual private agents. This paper therefore provides an analysis of the impact of the private agents’ biosecurity decisions on pathogen prevention and control within the plant trade. We model the impact that an infectious disease has on a plant nursery under a constant pressure of potentially infected input plant materials, like seeds and saplings, where the spread of the disease reduces the value of mature plants. We explore six scenarios to understand the influence of three key bioeconomic parameters; the disease's basic reproductive number, the loss in value of a mature plant from acquiring an infection and the cost-effectiveness of restriction. The results characterise the disease dynamics within the nursery and explore the trade-offs and synergies between the optimal level of efforts on restriction strategies (actions to prevent buying infected inputs), and on removal of infected plants in the nursery. For diseases that can be easily controlled, restriction and removal are substitutable strategies. In contrast, for highly infectious diseases, restriction and removal are often found to be complementary, provided that restriction is cost-effective and the optimal level of removal is non-zero.

Keywords
Bioeconomic model; Plant disease; Optimal control; Plant nursery model

Journal
Ecological Modelling: Volume 334

StatusPublished
FundersBiotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
Publication date24/08/2016
Publication date online16/05/2016
Date accepted by journal17/04/2016
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/23238
PublisherElsevier
ISSN0304-3800

Projects (1)