期刊论文详细信息
Forests
Modelling the Incursion and Spread of a Forestry Pest: Case Study of Monochamus alternatus Hope (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) in Victoria
Anna Weeks1  John Weiss2  Kathryn Sheffield2  David Smith3 
[1] Agriculture Victoria Research, Department of Jobs, Precincts and Resources, 124 Chiltern Valley Road, Rutherglen, VIC 3685, Australia;Agriculture Victoria Research, Department of Jobs, Precincts and Resources, AgriBio, 5 Ring Road, Bundoora, VIC 3083, Australia;Agriculture Victoria, Department of Jobs, Precincts and Resources, Office of the Chief Plant Health Officer, 2 Codrington Street, Cranbourne, VIC 3977, Australia;
关键词: dispersal;    wind dispersed;    host suitability;    Pinus;    surveillance;    insect pest;    degree day;    allee effect;   
DOI  :  10.3390/f10020198
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Effective and efficient systems for surveillance, eradication, containment and management of biosecurity threats require methods to predict the establishment, population growth and spread of organisms that pose a potential biosecurity risk. To support Victorian forest biosecurity operations, Agriculture Victoria has developed a landscape-scale, spatially explicit, spatio-temporal population growth and dispersal model of a generic pest pine beetle. The model can be used to simulate the incursion of a forestry pest from a nominated location(s), such as an importation business site (approved arrangement, AA), into the surrounding environment. The model provides both illustrative and quantitative data on population dynamics and spread of a forestry pest species. Flexibility built into the model design enables a range of spatial extents to be modelled, from user-defined study areas to the Victoria-wide area. The spatial resolution of the model (size of grid cells) can be altered from 100 m to greater than 1 km. The model allows core parameters to be altered by the user, enabling the spread of a variety of windborne insect species and pathogens to be investigated. We verified the model and its parameters by simulating and comparing the outputs with the 1999/2000 Melbourne incursion, but no establishment of a forestry pest beetle was believed to be Monochamus alternatus Hope (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae). The model accurately predicts the distance and direction of the historic incursion, and the subsequent failure to establish is due to low overall population density of the pest species.

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