Framework for assessing vertebrate invasive species damage: the case of feral swine in the United States

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Abstract

The aim of this study is to provide a general overview of the economic impacts associated with vertebrate invasive species (VIS) in the United States and suggests a methodology for differentiating types of damage. We identify a general framework for categorizing VIS damage that separates this damage into three main categories: destruction, depredation, and disease. We then examine how this framework fits into current published estimates of damage and management costs. Economic impacts associated with feral swine damage and management are plentiful enough to warrant separate treatment from other VIS and are observed in all three categories. For all VIS examined in this study, damage estimates associated with destruction provide the most evaluations of VIS impacts, especially destruction of crops. Evaluations of the losses associated with depredation are largely absent from the literature. We find that while published studies have estimated substantial economic impact associated with VIS, the current state of the literature focusing on VIS frequently fails to address all of the categories of damage, is difficult to compare or replicate, and is unsuited for extrapolation to nation-wide estimates of damage.

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Shwiff, S., Pelham, A., Shwiff, S., Haden-Chomphosy, W., Brown, V. R., Ernst, K., & Anderson, A. (2020). Framework for assessing vertebrate invasive species damage: the case of feral swine in the United States. Biological Invasions, 22(10), 3101–3117. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-020-02311-8

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