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Harvesting and Control

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Presentation on theme: "Harvesting and Control"— Presentation transcript:

1 Harvesting and Control
Photo: J.-D. Lebreton

2 Harvest: Control: Number removed is the parameter of interest
How many deer can be taken from management unit? Control: Number remaining is the parameter of interest Maintaining herd size of wild horses

3 Concept of Sustainable Harvest
Consider the logistic model dN/dt = RN*(K - N)/K Nt+1 = Nt + RNt(1-Nt)/K

4 Relationship of harvest
size to population size What’s going on? The maximum per capita growth rate occurs when ….

5

6 The Maximum Sustained Yield
“The largest harvest rate that can be imposed without causing population to decline” For the logistic model: MSY occurs at 1/2 K. The value is RK/4

7 Logistic-based Harvest Models
dN/dt = rN(1-N/K) – L L=loss from harvest Fixed-Quota Harvest Model: L = some constant Fixed-Effort Harvest Model: dN/dt = rN(1-N/K)-(E*C*N) where E = effort, C = catchability, E*C*N = L

8 Implications of Fixed-Quota Harvest
What’s happening here Q N2 N1 Note: trend of pop declining to extinction is indistinguishable from pop decline to ½ K

9 Implications of Fixed-Effort Harvest
Proportion removed MSY A yield curve with varying effort is useful— On board

10 Environmental variability
Limitations of Logistic-based Harvest Models Environmental variability Estimation of carrying capacity Estimating population parameters More complex relationships age/stage structure

11 Structured Population Models for Harvest
Motivation: Many harvest strategies select specific age/stage class Implications of life history strategy Experimental work frequently done on invertebrates

12 Effects of Age/Stage on Harvest Harvest of youngest age class:
1. Reduced total popn size 2. Altered popn structure Before harvest Total yield inc to 90% harvest rate -yield/ind increased (compensation) After Total yield Ind. yield 4. Increase in life expectancy

13 Additive versus Compensatory Mortality
Importance of regulation

14 CONTROL Two main goals: Limit populations of desired species Eradicate unwanted populations (usually exotic species)

15 Control Consider the logistic model once again… How could control work? dN/dt N

16 Lethal control of animal populations
Issues and Biological Considerations

17 Control of pest plant populations
Considerations?...

18 Fertility Control Two goals: eradication limitation of populations Mechanism: prevent reproduction Population-level implications?

19 Issues with wildlife contraception
Technological Ethical Biological

20 Conclusions Both harvest and control draw heavily
on population ecology of target species Harvest and control primarily differ in objective not in scientific principles Ethical/societal issues of major importance (this is as much about policy as it is about science)

21 Ungraded Homework Assignment
How do the goals of control and harvest differ? What biological principles do they both rely upon?


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