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A bio-economic 'war game' model to simulate plant disease incursions and test response strategies at the landscape scale
Journal article   Peer reviewed

A bio-economic 'war game' model to simulate plant disease incursions and test response strategies at the landscape scale

David C. Cook, Jean-Philippe Aurambout, Oscar N. Villalta, Shuang Liu, Jacqueline Edwards and Savi Maharaj
Food security, Vol.8(1), pp.37-48
2016

Abstract

Food Science & Technology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Science & Technology
Loss of area freedom from invasive alien species can have serious food security implications and place huge responsibility on incursion response managers. They make critical decisions despite profound uncertainty surrounding invasion ecology, surveillance and control technology effectiveness and human behaviour. We propose a spatially-explicit model that can aid response managers in devising and testing management strategies in a virtual world where the costs of failure are negligible. We apply the model in a group-based decision setting in which participants practise responding to fictional disease incursions in a pome fruit production area in Australia. Using the model, the response management group was able to develop mutually satisfactory rules of thumb for the use of quarantine and destruction zones and for when to withdraw resources from eradication efforts.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#14 Life Below Water
#15 Life on Land

Source: InCites

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InCites Highlights

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
3 Agriculture, Environment & Ecology
3.40 Forestry
3.40.86 Plant Communities
Web Of Science research areas
Food Science & Technology
ESI research areas
Agricultural Sciences
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