Emerging wildlife diseases are taking a heavy toll on animal and plant species worldwide. Mitigation, particularly in the initial epidemic phase, is hindered by uncertainty about the epidemiology and management of emerging diseases, but also by vague or poorly defined objectives. Here, we use a quantitative analysis to assess how the decision context of mitigation objectives, available strategies and practical constraints influences the decision of whether and how to respond to epidemics in wildlife. To illustrate our approach, we parametrized the model for European fire salamanders affected by Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans, and explored different combinations of conservation, containment and budgetary objectives. We found that in appro...
Emerging infectious diseases cause extirpation of wildlife populations. We use an epidemiological mo...
For many emerging or re-emerging pathogens, cases in humans arise from a mixture of introductions (v...
Emerging infectious diseases cause extirpation of wildlife populations. We use an epidemiological mo...
Despite calls for improved responses to emerging infectious diseases in wildlife, management is seld...
Conservation science can be most effective in its decision‐support role when seeking answers to clea...
1. Conservation science can be most effective in its decision-support role when seeking answers to c...
Novel outbreaks of emerging pathogens require rapid responses to enable successful mitigation. We si...
Mitigation of infectious wildlife diseases is especially challenging where pathogens affect communit...
1.Conservation science can be most effective in its decision-support role when seeking answers to cl...
Infectious disease is an emerging threat that conservationists are ill-equipped to manage. The threa...
Emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) of wildlife have characteristics that make them difficult to man...
Emerging wildlife diseases represent both a major driver of global biodiversity loss and one of the ...
Emerging infectious diseases cause extirpation of wildlife populations. We use an epidemiological mo...
Abstract Outbreaks of disease at the wildlife–livestock interface may require management interventio...
Emerging infectious diseases cause extirpation of wildlife populations. We use an epidemiological mo...
Emerging infectious diseases cause extirpation of wildlife populations. We use an epidemiological mo...
For many emerging or re-emerging pathogens, cases in humans arise from a mixture of introductions (v...
Emerging infectious diseases cause extirpation of wildlife populations. We use an epidemiological mo...
Despite calls for improved responses to emerging infectious diseases in wildlife, management is seld...
Conservation science can be most effective in its decision‐support role when seeking answers to clea...
1. Conservation science can be most effective in its decision-support role when seeking answers to c...
Novel outbreaks of emerging pathogens require rapid responses to enable successful mitigation. We si...
Mitigation of infectious wildlife diseases is especially challenging where pathogens affect communit...
1.Conservation science can be most effective in its decision-support role when seeking answers to cl...
Infectious disease is an emerging threat that conservationists are ill-equipped to manage. The threa...
Emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) of wildlife have characteristics that make them difficult to man...
Emerging wildlife diseases represent both a major driver of global biodiversity loss and one of the ...
Emerging infectious diseases cause extirpation of wildlife populations. We use an epidemiological mo...
Abstract Outbreaks of disease at the wildlife–livestock interface may require management interventio...
Emerging infectious diseases cause extirpation of wildlife populations. We use an epidemiological mo...
Emerging infectious diseases cause extirpation of wildlife populations. We use an epidemiological mo...
For many emerging or re-emerging pathogens, cases in humans arise from a mixture of introductions (v...
Emerging infectious diseases cause extirpation of wildlife populations. We use an epidemiological mo...