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Mice, rats and people: the bio-economics of agricultural rodent pests

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 08:16 authored by N Stenseth, Herwig Leirs, A Skonhost, Stephen DavisStephen Davis, R Pech, H Andreasson, G Singleton, M Lima, R Machung'u, R Makundi, Z Zhang, P Brown, D Shi, X Wan
Mice, rats, and other rodents threaten food production and act as reservoirs for disease throughout the world. In Asia alone, the rice loss every year caused by rodents could feed about 200 million people. Damage to crops in Africa and South America is equally dramatic. Rodent control often comes too late, is inefficient, or is considered too expensive. Using the multimammate mouse (Mastomys natalensis) in Tanzania and the house mouse (Mus domesticus) in southeastern Australia as primary case studies, we demonstrate how ecology and economics can be combined to identify management strategies to make rodent control work more efficiently than it does today. Three more rodent-pest systems - including two from Asia, the rice-field rat (Rattus argentiventer) and Brandt's vole (Microtus brandti), and one from South America, the leaf-eared mouse (Phyllotis darwini) - are presented within the same bio-economic perspective. For all these species, the ability to relate outbreaks to interannual climatic variability creates the potential to assess the economic benefits of forecasting rodent outbreaks.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.2307/3868189
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 15409295

Journal

Frontiers in Ecology and Environment

Volume

1

Issue

7

Start page

367

End page

375

Total pages

9

Publisher

Ecological Society of America

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2003 Ecological Society of America

Former Identifier

2006021028

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2013-02-11