Economic estimates of invasive wild ungulate damage to livestock producers in Hawai'i.

IF 3.8 1区 农林科学 Q1 AGRONOMY Pest Management Science Pub Date : 2024-10-03 DOI:10.1002/ps.8446
Stephanie A Shwiff, Carolyn Lw Auweloa, Kyle Caires, Greg Friel, Lauren Katayama, Zachary Munoz, Melissa R Price, Derek Risch, Mostafa Shartaj, Karen Steensma, Mark Thorne, Ray Zifko
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Abstract

Background: Invasive ungulates (hoofed mammals), including deer, feral pigs, feral goats, and feral sheep, are known to cause damage to agriculture, property, natural resources, and many other commodities. Most of the information regarding the economic impacts of wild ungulates is from North America, where some of these species are native. To evaluate invasive ungulate damage to livestock producers in the Hawaiian Islands, which have no native ungulates, a survey was distributed to livestock producers across the state.

Results: Survey results described how total annual costs are distributed among damage, control, and repairs for survey respondents, who represented a significant percentage of total ranchland acreage across the islands. The estimates, excluding fixed fence installation, revealed an annual cost to livestock producers who responded to the survey of US$1.42 million, which ranged from $3.6 million to $7.5 million when extrapolated to the entire state. The large cost contributors included damage to property, pastureland repair, control costs (excluding fencing), supplemental feed, and predation of calves by wild pigs. Additionally, producers reported spending more than $2 million in upfront fence installation costs. Most of these costs were reported by respondents on the islands of Hawai'i and Moloka'i.

Conclusion: Study results revealed substantial damage to state livestock producers due to wild ungulates and are useful in determining an invasive ungulate management strategy that can appropriately aid the most impacted sectors of Hawai'i. © 2024 The Author(s). Pest Management Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society of Chemical Industry.

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入侵野生蹄类动物对夏威夷牲畜生产者造成的经济损失估算。
背景:众所周知,入侵有蹄类动物(有蹄哺乳动物),包括鹿、野猪、野山羊和野绵羊,会对农业、财产、自然资源和许多其他商品造成损害。有关野生有蹄类动物经济影响的信息大多来自北美,其中一些物种原产于北美。夏威夷群岛没有原生有蹄类动物,为了评估入侵有蹄类动物对该州畜牧业生产者造成的损害,我们向全州的畜牧业生产者发放了一份调查问卷:调查结果:调查结果描述了调查对象的年度总成本在损害、控制和维修方面的分配情况,调查对象占整个群岛牧场总面积的很大比例。估算结果(不包括固定围栏的安装)显示,接受调查的畜牧业生产者每年的成本为 142 万美元,推算到全州,则从 360 万美元到 750 万美元不等。造成巨额成本的因素包括财产损失、牧场修复、控制成本(不包括围栏)、补充饲料以及野猪对小牛的捕食。此外,据生产者报告,围栏安装的前期费用超过 200 万美元。夏威夷岛和摩洛卡岛的受访者报告了其中的大部分费用:研究结果表明,野生有蹄类动物给本州畜牧业生产者造成了巨大损失,有助于确定有蹄类动物入侵管理策略,为夏威夷受影响最严重的行业提供适当帮助。© 2024 作者。害虫管理科学》由 John Wiley & Sons Ltd 代表化学工业协会出版。
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来源期刊
Pest Management Science
Pest Management Science 农林科学-昆虫学
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
9.80%
发文量
553
审稿时长
4.8 months
期刊介绍: Pest Management Science is the international journal of research and development in crop protection and pest control. Since its launch in 1970, the journal has become the premier forum for papers on the discovery, application, and impact on the environment of products and strategies designed for pest management. Published for SCI by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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