Managing Resistance Evolution with Refugia - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Managing Resistance Evolution with Refugia

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Managing Resistance Evolution with Refugia Livingston, Carlson and Fackler Presented by Ben Crost The Setting Cotton production in the midsouth Two pests: budworm and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Managing Resistance Evolution with Refugia


1
Managing Resistance Evolution with Refugia
  • Livingston, Carlson and Fackler
  • Presented by Ben Crost

2
The Setting
  • Cotton production in the midsouth
  • Two pests budworm and bollworm
  • Two pest-control technologies Bt-cotton and
    pyrethroids
  • Evolution of resistance to pest-control is a
    major problem

3
The Setting (2)
  • Resistance-free pests are a public good
  • The EPA tries to control resistance by mandating
    refugia
  • Farmers have two options
  • 1.) leave 5 of their cotton-crop non-Bt and
    unsprayed
  • 2.) leave 20 non-Bt but sprayed

4
The Question
  • What is the optimal size of refugia?
  • Combine biological, economic and regulatory model

5
Biological Model
  • 2-locus by 2-allele model
  • Locus The specific place on a chromosome where a
    gene is located
  • Allele A variant of the DNA sequence at a given
    locus

6
Biological Model (2)
  • 2 Loci Bt-resistance, Pyrethroid resistance
  • 2 Alleles resistant, non-resistant
  • This setup gives rise to 9 different genotypes
    (since each individual has 2 sets of chromosomes)

7
Biological Model (3)
  • 5 non-overlapping generations
  • Genes get transmitted between generations by
    random mating
  • (Calculate frequencies of all 4 possible gametes
    and then frequencies of all 9 possible
    combinations)

8
Biological Model (4)
  • Genotypes can be confronted with 4 possible
    environments (Bt/non-Bt by sprayed/unsprayed)
  • Each genotype has a survival-probability in each
    environment
  • Given the environments, we know what will happen
    to the pest-population

9
Economic Model
  • Representative producer maximizes profits, s.t.
    pest-population and regulatory constraints
  • Size of pest-population maps into Bt-use,
    Pyrethroid-use and profits
  • Bt-use and Pyrethroid-use feed back into
    biological model

10
Regulatory Model
  • Regulators want to choose refuge constraints that
    maximize the representative producers discounted
    profits
  • 2 Scenarios Static and dynamic

11
Estimation
  • Lots of parameters from a variety of sources
    (lab-studies, econometric estimation from
    observed data, educated guesses from observed
    data)
  • Grid search over possible refugia sizes

12
Results
  • Current refugia mandates are too large (optimal
    would be 2 unsprayed or 16 sprayed)
  • Results are very sensitive to heterozygous
    Bt-resistance parameter (up to 74 sprayed
    refugia with still realistic parameters)

13
Remarks
  • It seems that the authors were aiming for a low
    value of refugia
  • They chose a short time-horizon and no bequest
    value
  • Their values for heterozygous resistance are
    lower than lab-studies suggest

14
Improvements?
  • Get better estimates of model parameters
  • Calibrate model to observed data
  • Bayesian Model Averaging
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