Cost-benefit analysis for invasive species control: the case of greater Canada goose Branta canadensisin Flanders (northern Belgium)

Background Sound decisions on control actions for established invasive alien species (IAS) require information on ecological as well as socio-economic impact of the species and of its management. Cost-benefit analysis provides part of this information, yet has received relatively little attention in...

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Published in:PeerJ
Main Authors: Reyns, Nikolaas, Casaer, Jim, De Smet, Lieven, Devos, Koen, Huysentruyt, Frank, Robertson, Peter A., Verbeke, Tom, Adriaens, Tim
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: PeerJ 2018
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.4283
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spelling crpeerj:10.7717/peerj.4283 2024-10-13T14:06:27+00:00 Cost-benefit analysis for invasive species control: the case of greater Canada goose Branta canadensisin Flanders (northern Belgium) Reyns, Nikolaas Casaer, Jim De Smet, Lieven Devos, Koen Huysentruyt, Frank Robertson, Peter A. Verbeke, Tom Adriaens, Tim 2018 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.4283 https://peerj.com/articles/4283.pdf https://peerj.com/articles/4283.xml https://peerj.com/articles/4283.html en eng PeerJ http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ PeerJ volume 6, page e4283 ISSN 2167-8359 journal-article 2018 crpeerj https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.4283 2024-09-17T04:34:21Z Background Sound decisions on control actions for established invasive alien species (IAS) require information on ecological as well as socio-economic impact of the species and of its management. Cost-benefit analysis provides part of this information, yet has received relatively little attention in the scientific literature on IAS. Methods We apply a bio-economic model in a cost-benefit analysis framework to greater Canada goose Branta canadensis , an IAS with documented social, economic and ecological impacts in Flanders (northern Belgium). We compared a business as usual (BAU) scenario which involved non-coordinated hunting and egg destruction with an enhanced scenario based on a continuation of these activities but supplemented with coordinated capture of moulting birds. To assess population growth under the BAU scenario we fitted a logistic growth model to the observed pre-moult capture population. Projected damage costs included water eutrophication and damage to cultivated grasslands and were calculated for all scenarios. Management costs of the moult captures were based on a representative average of the actual cost of planning and executing moult captures. Results Comparing the scenarios with different capture rates, different costs for eutrophication and various discount rates, showed avoided damage costs were in the range of 21.15 M€ to 45.82 M€ under the moult capture scenario. The lowest value for the avoided costs applied to the scenario where we lowered the capture rate by 10%. The highest value occurred in the scenario where we lowered the real discount rate from 4% to 2.5%. Discussion The reduction in damage costs always outweighed the additional management costs of moult captures. Therefore, additional coordinated moult captures could be applied to limit the negative economic impact of greater Canada goose at a regional scale. We further discuss the strengths and weaknesses of our approach and its potential application to other IAS. Article in Journal/Newspaper Branta canadensis Canada Goose PeerJ Publishing Canada PeerJ 6 e4283
institution Open Polar
collection PeerJ Publishing
op_collection_id crpeerj
language English
description Background Sound decisions on control actions for established invasive alien species (IAS) require information on ecological as well as socio-economic impact of the species and of its management. Cost-benefit analysis provides part of this information, yet has received relatively little attention in the scientific literature on IAS. Methods We apply a bio-economic model in a cost-benefit analysis framework to greater Canada goose Branta canadensis , an IAS with documented social, economic and ecological impacts in Flanders (northern Belgium). We compared a business as usual (BAU) scenario which involved non-coordinated hunting and egg destruction with an enhanced scenario based on a continuation of these activities but supplemented with coordinated capture of moulting birds. To assess population growth under the BAU scenario we fitted a logistic growth model to the observed pre-moult capture population. Projected damage costs included water eutrophication and damage to cultivated grasslands and were calculated for all scenarios. Management costs of the moult captures were based on a representative average of the actual cost of planning and executing moult captures. Results Comparing the scenarios with different capture rates, different costs for eutrophication and various discount rates, showed avoided damage costs were in the range of 21.15 M€ to 45.82 M€ under the moult capture scenario. The lowest value for the avoided costs applied to the scenario where we lowered the capture rate by 10%. The highest value occurred in the scenario where we lowered the real discount rate from 4% to 2.5%. Discussion The reduction in damage costs always outweighed the additional management costs of moult captures. Therefore, additional coordinated moult captures could be applied to limit the negative economic impact of greater Canada goose at a regional scale. We further discuss the strengths and weaknesses of our approach and its potential application to other IAS.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Reyns, Nikolaas
Casaer, Jim
De Smet, Lieven
Devos, Koen
Huysentruyt, Frank
Robertson, Peter A.
Verbeke, Tom
Adriaens, Tim
spellingShingle Reyns, Nikolaas
Casaer, Jim
De Smet, Lieven
Devos, Koen
Huysentruyt, Frank
Robertson, Peter A.
Verbeke, Tom
Adriaens, Tim
Cost-benefit analysis for invasive species control: the case of greater Canada goose Branta canadensisin Flanders (northern Belgium)
author_facet Reyns, Nikolaas
Casaer, Jim
De Smet, Lieven
Devos, Koen
Huysentruyt, Frank
Robertson, Peter A.
Verbeke, Tom
Adriaens, Tim
author_sort Reyns, Nikolaas
title Cost-benefit analysis for invasive species control: the case of greater Canada goose Branta canadensisin Flanders (northern Belgium)
title_short Cost-benefit analysis for invasive species control: the case of greater Canada goose Branta canadensisin Flanders (northern Belgium)
title_full Cost-benefit analysis for invasive species control: the case of greater Canada goose Branta canadensisin Flanders (northern Belgium)
title_fullStr Cost-benefit analysis for invasive species control: the case of greater Canada goose Branta canadensisin Flanders (northern Belgium)
title_full_unstemmed Cost-benefit analysis for invasive species control: the case of greater Canada goose Branta canadensisin Flanders (northern Belgium)
title_sort cost-benefit analysis for invasive species control: the case of greater canada goose branta canadensisin flanders (northern belgium)
publisher PeerJ
publishDate 2018
url http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.4283
https://peerj.com/articles/4283.pdf
https://peerj.com/articles/4283.xml
https://peerj.com/articles/4283.html
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Branta canadensis
Canada Goose
genre_facet Branta canadensis
Canada Goose
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