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Approaches for estimating benefits and costs of interventions in plant biosecurity across invasion phases

March 2021

Publication: Ecological Applicaitons
Author(s): Melissa J. Welsh, James A. Turner, Rebecca S. Epanchin-Niell, Juan J. Monge, Tarek Soliman, Andrew P. Robinson, John M. Kean, Craig Phillips, Lloyd D. Stringer, Jessica Vereijssen, Andrew M. Liebhold, Tom Kompas, Michael Ormsby, Eckehard G. Brockerhoff

Nonnative plant pests cause billions of dollars in damages. It is critical to prevent or reduce these losses by intervening at various stages of the invasion process, including pathway risk management (to prevent pest arrival), surveillance and eradication (to counter establishment), and management of established pests (to limit damages). Quantifying benefits and costs of these interventions is important to justify and prioritize investments and to inform biosecurity policy. However, approaches for these estimations differ in (1) the assumed relationship between supply, demand, and prices, and (2) the ability to assess different types of direct and indirect costs at invasion stages, for a given arrival or establishment probability.

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