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Mice, rats, and people: the bio-economics of agricultural rodent pests

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dc.creator Stenseth, Nils Chr
dc.creator Leirs, Herwig
dc.creator Skonhoft, Anders
dc.creator Davis, Stephen A
dc.creator Pech, Roger P
dc.creator Andreassent, Harry P
dc.creator Singleton, Grant R.
dc.creator Lima, Mauricio
dc.creator Machang'u, Robert S
dc.creator Makundi, Rhodes H
dc.creator Zhang, Zhibin
dc.creator Brown, Peter R
dc.creator Shi, Dazhao
dc.creator Wan, Xinrong
dc.date 2016-12-02T12:11:46Z
dc.date 2016-12-02T12:11:46Z
dc.date 2003
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T08:51:50Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T08:51:50Z
dc.identifier https://www.suaire.sua.ac.tz/handle/123456789/1074
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/91812
dc.description Wiley is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
dc.description Mice, rats, and other rodents threaten food production and act as reservoirs for disease throughout the world. In Asia aldne, the rice loss every year caused by rodents could feed about 200 million people. Damage to crops in Africa and South America is equally dramatic. Rodent control often comes too late, is inefficient, or is considered too expensive. Using the multimammate mouse (Mastomys natalensis) in Tanzania and the house mouse (Mus domesticus) in southeastern Australia as primary case studies, we demonstrate how ecology and economics can be combined to identify management strategies to make rodent control work more efficiently than it does today. Three more rodent-pest systems - including two from Asia, the rice-field rat (Rattus argentiventer) and Brandt's vole (Microtus brandti), and one from I South America, the leaf-eared mouse (Phyllotis darwini) - are presented within the same bio-economic per- spective. For all these species, the ability to relate outbreaks to interannual climatic variability creates the potential to assess the economic benefits of forecasting rodent outbreaks.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher Wiley
dc.subject Mice
dc.subject Rats
dc.subject agricultural rodent pests
dc.subject bio-economics
dc.subject Food production
dc.title Mice, rats, and people: the bio-economics of agricultural rodent pests
dc.type Article


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