Impact statement
We review the latest quantitative methods that can be used to analyse surveillance data to estimate the probability of species absence, when no individuals are detected. These methods allow defendable and transparent decisions to be made about the probability of successful eradication. Decisions associated with eradication operations need to be evidence-based to ensure that cost-efficient strategies are adopted and to satisfy concerns of funders, policymakers, managers and the public.
Introduction
The impacts of invasive species on ecosystems are becoming increasingly pervasive, threatening biodiversity, ecosystem functioning, agricultural productivity and human health (Myers et al., Reference Myers, Simberloff, Kuris and Carey2000; Simberloff, Reference Simberloff2014; Seebens et al., Reference Seebens, Blackburn, Dyer, Genovesi, Hulme, Jeschke, Pagad, Pyšek, Van Kleunen, Winter, Ansong, Arianoutsou, Bacher, Blasius, Brockerhoff, Brundu, Capinha, Causton, Celesti-Grapow, Dawson, Dullinger, Economo, Fuentes, Guénard, Jäger, Kartesz, Kenis, Kühn, Lenzner, Liebhold, Mosena, Moser, Nentwig, Nishino, Pearman, Pergl, Rabitsch, Rojas-Sandoval, Roques, Rorke, Rossinelli, Roy, Scalera, Schindler, Štajerová, Tokarska-Guzik, Walker, Ward, Yamanaka and Essl2018; Blackburn et al., Reference Blackburn, Bellard and Ricciardi2019; Seebens et al., Reference Seebens, Blackburn, Hulme, van Kleunen, Liebhold, Orlova-Bienkowskaja, Pyšek, Schindler and Essl2021). Early intervention against incursions of invasive species that aims for eradication represents some of the highest benefit/cost ratios for investments in biosecurity policy (Baxter et al., Reference Baxter, Sabo, Wilcox, McCarthy and Possingham2008). However, eradication of invasive species can be challenging, especially once the species has become established. Eradicating a pest species from an area requires removing all individuals and simultaneously preventing reinvasion (Bomford and O’Brien, Reference Bomford and O’Brien1995). Despite these challenges, the list of international eradications is growing rapidly and encompasses diverse taxa, with over 1,550 eradication events recorded in the Database of Island Invasive Species Eradications, including 1,081 successful eradications of 59 species (Spatz et al., Reference Spatz, Holmes, Will, Hein, Carter, Fewster, Keitt, Genovesi, Samaniego, Croll, Tershy and Russell2022). New technologies and evidence-based strategies (Nugent et al., Reference Nugent, Gormley, Anderson and Crews2018; Murphy et al., Reference Murphy, Russell, Broome, Ryan and Dowding2019) are enabling eradication of pest species from increasingly larger islands and continental areas (Cruz et al., Reference Cruz, Donlan, Campbell and Carrion2005; Carrion et al., Reference Carrion, Donlan, Campbell, Lavoie and Cruz2011; Anderson et al., Reference Anderson, Pepper, Travers, Michaels, Sullivan and Ramsey2022a). With eradication programmes becoming more ambitious and logistically difficult, the need to provide evidenced-based criteria for evaluating the progress and success of eradication programmes is becoming more critical.
Key questions
One of the main decisions facing managers attempting to eradicate an invasive species is deciding when eradication has occurred. Once the species is no longer being detected, a decision must be made about when to stop the eradication programme and declare success (Morrison et al., Reference Morrison, Macdonald, Walker, Lozier and Shaw2007; Ramsey et al., Reference Ramsey, Parkes and Morrison2009). In many eradication programmes, this decision is based on ad hoc rules (Russell and Blackburn, Reference Russell and Blackburn2017). One popular rule of thumb for declaring eradication success for animal pests is 2 years without a detection (e.g., Dominiak et al., Reference Dominiak, Gott, McIver, Grant, Gillespie, Worsley, Clift and Sergeant2011; Robinson and Copson, Reference Robinson and Copson2014; Russell et al., Reference Russell, Binnie, Oh, Anderson and Samaniego-Herrera2016), whereas 3–5 years without a detection is often used for weeds (Rejmanek and Pitcairn, Reference Rejmanek, Pitcairn, Vietch and Clout2002).
However, using ad hoc rules of thumb based on surveillance or waiting for arbitrary periods of time with no detections has several issues. The main difficulty is that the selected time to declare success may not be optimal. The optimal time for declaring eradication successful is one that takes into account the consequences of making an erroneous decision. If surveillance is insufficient, then eradication may be falsely declared, resulting in the population continuing to spread and cause negative impacts (a Type I error), whereas continuation of surveillance when eradication has already occurred wastes resources (a Type II error). Both of these types of errors incur costs, and the optimal decision is one that minimises these costs (Regan et al., Reference Regan, McCarthy, Baxter, Dane Panetta and Possingham2006). Here, we review the various methods that have been developed for quantifying these errors and incorporating them into the decision-making process for declaring eradication success. A glossary of important terms is included (Table 1).
Methods developed for examining eradication success
Collection of surveillance data to confirm eradication success is usually undertaken at the point when eradication is suspected to have occurred; hence, the data consist entirely (or almost entirely) of ‘zeros’ (absences). We define the period when active control of the species is being undertaken as the ‘removal phase’ and the period of surveillance to confirm eradication as the ‘confirmation phase’. In the usual sequence of events, the confirmation phase only commences once individuals are no longer being detected. If surveillance detects the species of interest, clearly, the species has not been eradicated (although ‘functional’ eradication could still be claimed [Green and Grosholz, Reference Green and Grosholz2021]). However, when the surveillance data consist entirely of absence records, how confident can we be that eradication has occurred? Confidence in eradication can be quantified by the probability of eradication (or species absence). Hence, following a series of zero detections from surveillance activities, the primary quantity of interest is the probability of absence, given the species was not detected.
Occupancy models have been developed to estimate false negative errors in biological species surveys (the probability the species was present but was not detected) (MacKenzie et al., Reference MacKenzie, Nichols, Lachman, Droege, Royle and Langtimm2002; Tyre et al., Reference Tyre, Tenhumberg, Field, Niejalke, Parris and Possingham2003). These models also allow estimation of the complement, the probability of absence given no detections. Extensions have involved the development of dynamic occupancy models, which allow estimation of colonisation and extinction rates, in addition to site occupancy (MacKenzie et al., Reference MacKenzie, Nichols, Royle, Pollock, Bailey and Hines2006). However, estimation of site occupancy requires the collection of spatially and temporally structured data on species presence and absence (e.g., using a sampling design), which can be labour-intensive and may not be possible towards the end of an eradication programme, when the species is mostly absent. In addition, the use of multiple types of monitoring data, both structured and unstructured (e.g., sighting reports collected haphazardly by the public), presents difficulties for use in occupancy models. Hence, using occupancy models to estimate eradication success may not always be practical or even feasible.
Several authors have used a time series of presence and absence records of a species (i.e., sighting records) to infer species absence (Solow, Reference Solow1993; Solow et al., Reference Solow, Seymour, Beet and Harris2008; Rout et al., Reference Rout, Salomon and McCarthy2009a). Interest is usually focused on the tail of the record, when sightings are sparse, and the inference is based on the number of absent sighting occasions deemed necessary for declaring absence. These methods model the unknown observation process by assuming that the underlying sighting rate of the species is either constant or declining and follows a stationary or nonstationary Poisson process. Various modifications of this approach have been developed to allow flexibility in the sighting process specifications, for example, modifications for handling uncertain sightings (Lee, Reference Lee2014), and for increasing or decreasing populations (Caley and Barry, Reference Caley and Barry2014). However, the incorporation of structured and unstructured surveillance data presents difficulties for these methods, especially if surveillance effort is nonconstant in space or time.
Early work on inferring species eradication or extinction proposed using a null hypothesis testing framework to inform the decision about when to declare a species absent after a series of zero sightings (e.g., Solow, Reference Solow1993; Reed, Reference Reed1996; Solow and Roberts, Reference Solow and Roberts2003; McInerny et al., Reference McInerny, Roberts, Davy and Cribb2006). Hence, this approach addresses the question of how many zero sightings are probable, given the species is extant (null hypothesis), setting a threshold for this probability (Type I error). Solow (Reference Solow1993) also provided an alternative framework that calculated the probability that the species was extant, given a sighting record, using Bayes’ theorem. This framework required construction of the prior probability that the species was extant and used Bayes factors to assess the degree of support for this probability (Solow, Reference Solow1993; Rout et al., Reference Rout, Salomon and McCarthy2009a). Regan et al. (Reference Regan, McCarthy, Baxter, Dane Panetta and Possingham2006) first proposed explicit consideration of the costs of making a Type I error (false declaration of eradication) or a Type II error (surveillance continues when species has been eradicated), adopting a Bayesian framework for inference. These costs were considered jointly, and eradication was declared when the net expected costs (NEC) were minimised. Hence, the optimal time to declare eradication success was a trade-off between the cost of ongoing surveillance and the cost of making a false declaration of eradication. The main issue with this approach was that uncertainty was not incorporated into the estimates of the detection (likelihood) and persistence (prior) parameters required by the model; hence, decisions may not be robust to uncertainty (Rout et al., Reference Rout, Thompson and McCarthy2009b)
Surveillance sensitivity
During the confirmation phase, the probability of absence can be derived from estimates of the surveillance sensitivity (SSe), the probability of detecting the species within a region of interest, given it is present at some predetermined level (i.e., the ‘design prevalence’ – see below) (Martin et al., Reference Martin, Cameron and Greiner2007). The SSe is subtly different from the detection probability that is derived from models fitted to monitoring data (e.g., occupancy models), which only condition on presence in a sampling unit. The SSe for a region is usually constructed from the sensitivities of the various types of surveillance, which can be either structured or unstructured (Martin et al., Reference Martin, Cameron and Greiner2007). Given a series of zero detections, the SSe quantifies the effectiveness of the search effort (the probability of detection given the design prevalence), but it is not, per se, an appropriate indicator of eradication success. The probability of absence given no detections from surveillance can be derived from the SSe using Bayes’ theorem, which also requires consideration of the prior probability of absence (i.e., the probability of absence prior to the confirmation phase). Given an estimate of the SSe and the prior probability of absence (Prior), the probability of species absence (PoA) is given by
where Specificity is the probability of not detecting the species when the species is not present. Equation (1) is analogous to the negative predictive value of a diagnostic test used in disease surveillance (Martin et al., Reference Martin, Cameron and Greiner2007). If we can assume that the Specificity is equal to 1.0 (i.e., no false positive detections), then equation (1) simplifies to
The Prior can be obtained in a number of ways, including (i) expert opinion (Ramsey et al., Reference Ramsey, Parkes and Morrison2009), (ii) meta-analysis of eradication programmes from similar species (Dodd et al., Reference Dodd, Ainsworth, Burgman and McCarthy2015), or (iii) use of models to simulate lethal control (Gormley et al., Reference Gormley, Holland, Barron, Anderson and Nugent2016).
The PoA is the metric used to guide decisions, which incorporates the Prior and the SSe. The following hypothetical example illustrates the importance of the Prior and why we bother with Bayesian logic. Consider two identical islands on which toxic baits were used to remove rats (Samaniego-Herrera et al., Reference Samaniego-Herrera, Anderson, Parkes and Aguirre-Muñoz2013). The first island had complete bait coverage, whereas the second had large gaps in bait deployment. The higher operational investment on the first island results in a higher prior probability of success (before the confirmation phase) than on the second island. The subsequent surveillance during the confirmation phase was equal on both islands (i.e., equal SSe), and no rats were detected. Combining the Prior with the SSe demonstrates, intuitively and quantitatively, that confidence in eradication success is higher for the first island than for the second.
The value specified for the Prior has a large influence on the level of surveillance that needs to be conducted to confidently declare absence of the pest (Figure 1A). For example, if we have low confidence that control was sufficient to eradicate the pest (Prior = 0.5), then surveillance efforts need to be extremely high (SSe = 0.9) to achieve a high level of confidence in successful eradication (PoA > 90%). Conversely, if the Prior = 0.8, then surveillance efforts can be reduced (yielding an SSe = 0.6) to achieve the same level of confidence regarding absence of the pest (PoA > 90%).
Quantitative planning increases the chances that a cost-effective surveillance strategy will be deployed (Gormley et al., Reference Gormley, Anderson and Nugent2018). We can rearrange equation (2) to determine the level of surveillance required ( $ {SSe}_{req} $ ) to improve our level of confidence in eradication from the Prior to the target PoA (PoA Target):
For example, if the Prior = 0.9 (i.e., we are 90% sure of eradication after control) and $ {PoA}_{\mathrm{Target}} $ = 0.95 (i.e., we want to be 95% sure of success), then $ {SSe}_{\mathrm{req}} $ = 0.53; this means that we need to do enough surveillance to have a 53% chance of detecting any remaining individuals at the design prevalence (Figure 1B). If, however, we wanted to be 99% sure of success, then for the same Prior, a much higher level of surveillance would be needed (i.e., $ {SSe}_{\mathrm{req}} $ = 0.91).
Spatial PoA model
Methods have been developed to estimate SSe by incorporating information on the spatial deployment of monitoring devices across the area of interest, and on attributes of the target species (Anderson et al., Reference Anderson, Ramsey, Nugent, Bosson, Livingstone, Martin, Sergeant, Gormley and Warburton2013; Kim et al., Reference Kim, Corson, Mulgan and Russell2020). The surveillance model is based on a simple spatial model for the detection of individuals based on a function of the distance between an individual and a detection device. Individuals are assumed to occupy a symmetric home range, and detection declines with increasing distance between the home range centre and the device location. This spatial detection process is governed by two parameters: $ {g}_0 $ – the probability of detection over a single time interval by a device placed at the home range centre (i.e., the maximum probability of detection); and $ \sigma $ – the rate of decay in the probability of detection with increasing distance between the home range centre and the device (Efford, Reference Efford2004). For simplicity, a half-normal function is usually used to model the decay in detection probability, with $ \sigma $ being equivalent to the standard deviation of the circular normal kernel. This parameter is proportional to the home range size of an individual. This simple model was first used to model detection in spatially explicit capture–recapture models (Efford, Reference Efford2004; Borchers and Efford, Reference Borchers and Efford2008). However, this spatial detection function has also proved to be useful in simulation models for designing efficient surveillance for achieving management objectives (Ramsey et al., Reference Ramsey, Efford, Ball and Nugent2005; Gormley and Warburton, Reference Gormley and Warburton2020; Anderson et al., Reference Anderson, Pepper, Travers, Michaels, Sullivan and Ramsey2022a).
The spatial surveillance approach is constructed by superimposing a spatially referenced grid-cell system on the area of interest (i.e., a raster layer). Each grid cell corresponds to a sampling unit, and the model quantifies the probability of detecting an individual in each grid cell, given a surviving individual’s home range centre is located in the grid cell. Detection devices or search effort in or around a grid cell have a chance of detecting an individual. Each device type has its own maximum detection probability ( $ {g}_0 $ ), with $ \sigma $ derived from home range estimates for the species. A spatially explicit detection surface is quantified by adding detection kernels for each device location. The height (or intensity) of the kernel is equivalent to the amount of sampling effort undertaken by that device (e.g., number of trap nights). The number of grid cells covered by all kernels determines the proportion of the total area covered by surveillance. Alternatively, grid cells can be searched directly with the probability of detection related to the amount of search effort in a cell. Methods based on search effort by observers are most often employed during surveillance for weeds (e.g., Garrard et al., Reference Garrard, Bekessy, McCarthy and Wintle2008; Hauser et al., Reference Hauser, Giljohann, McCarthy, Garrard, Robinson, Williams and Moore2022). The grid-cell approach allows the accommodation of diverse combinations of surveillance information, which might vary by detection method, location, sampling effort, and deployment period. The use of multiple detection methods, including those not requiring an interaction by the animal (such as a camera or eDNA), can improve the chances of detecting device-shy individuals.
The spatially explicit surveillance model also incorporates habitat selection by the target species because the likely location of a limited number of survivors is not expected to be equal across the landscape but concentrated in preferred areas. Resource selection studies (Manly et al., Reference Manly, McDonald, Thomas, McDonald and Erickson2002) and the results from species distribution models (Elith et al., Reference Elith, Graham, Anderson, Dudík, Ferrier, Guisan, Hijmans, Huettmann, Leathwick, Lehmann, Li, Lohmann, Loiselle, Manion, Moritz, Nakamura, Nakazawa, Overton, Peterson, Phillips, Richardson, Scachetti-Pereira, Schapire, Soberón, Williams, Wisz and Zimmermann2006) can inform the relative probabilities of survivors in different locations and assist in the creation of a relative-risk map (Anderson et al., Reference Anderson, Ramsey, Nugent, Bosson, Livingstone, Martin, Sergeant, Gormley and Warburton2013, Reference Anderson, Pepper, Travers, Michaels, Sullivan and Ramsey2022a). The resolution of the grid-cell system superimposed on the eradication area should be finer than the home range size and should also accommodate spatial heterogeneity of the relative-risk map. The estimated SSe will be maximised when search effort is spatially distributed proportionate to the relative risk of survivor presence (Martin et al., Reference Martin, Cameron and Greiner2007).
The SSe for the eradication area is calculated by combining the spatial surveillance surface (grid-cell-level probabilities of detection), the relative-risk map of habitat use, and a statistical parameter representing the minimum number of occupied grid cells $ ({P}_u $ ) that are available to be detected. The latter element is referred to as ‘design prevalence’ in disease surveillance (Cameron and Baldock, Reference Cameron and Baldock1998) and determines the definition of the SSe. For example, if the minimum number of occupied grid cells is set to 1, the SSe is defined as ‘the probability of detecting an individual given that only one grid cell is occupied in the area of interest’. Intuitively, it is easier to detect one of many occupied grid cells than a single occupied grid cell. When aiming to confirm eradication success, we are trying to find the last survivor, or one of a few remaining survivors. Therefore, the minimum number of occupied grid cells is generally set to 1 (however, see ‘Extensions to the PoA model’ below). If we obtain a high SSe assuming only one occupied cell, and do not detect anything, we can increase our confidence that less than one cell remains occupied, that is, zero are present.
Values for the spatially explicit detection parameters ( $ {g}_0 $ and $ \sigma $ ) of animals in monitoring devices can be obtained from published reports, experimental or field studies (Efford, Reference Efford2004; Ball et al., Reference Ball, Ramsey, Nugent, Warburton and Efford2005; Ramsey et al., Reference Ramsey, Caley and Robley2015; Anderson et al., Reference Anderson, Rouco, Latham and Warburton2022b) or expert opinion (Anderson et al., Reference Anderson, Pepper, Travers, Michaels, Sullivan and Ramsey2022a). Similarly, detection experiments have typically been used to estimate the probability of weed detection given a certain amount of search effort (Garrard et al., Reference Garrard, Bekessy, McCarthy and Wintle2008; Hauser et al., Reference Hauser, Giljohann, McCarthy, Garrard, Robinson, Williams and Moore2022). These parameters are input into the model as distributions in order to account for uncertainty. High variances should be used where there is high parameter uncertainty, which is propagated through to estimates of SSe (Anderson et al., Reference Anderson, Pepper, Travers, Michaels, Sullivan and Ramsey2022a). Given high parameter uncertainty, increasing sample size, through increased surveillance effort, will increase the mean and decrease the variance of the SSe.
Once an estimate of SSe and its uncertainty is obtained, the PoA (and associated variance) can be calculated, initially by updating the Prior (equation (2)). The resulting PoA then becomes the prior probability for the next round of surveillance data, and so forth. This updating of the PoA continues as new surveillance data are added (Anderson et al., Reference Anderson, Ramsey, Nugent, Bosson, Livingstone, Martin, Sergeant, Gormley and Warburton2013; Ramsey et al., Reference Ramsey, Campbell, Lavoie, Macdonald and Morrison2022), until the mean PoA exceeds a target threshold, which is set by stopping rules (see below).
Stopping rules
No matter how much surveillance is undertaken, managers can never be certain about eradication success, due to uncertainty in the detection process. Decisions on when to declare success must consider the risk of being wrong. As stated above, this risk can be encapsulated by the Type I and Type II error rates and the consequences of making a wrong decision. A stopping rule is a statement about the criteria for ceasing an eradication programme, which may or may not consider these error rates.
Intuitively, successful eradication can be declared when there is a high probability that the residual population is zero. This is equivalent to minimising the Type I error rate, the probability that eradication is wrongly declared. A logical stopping rule would involve a threshold for the PoA that, when exceeded, triggers declaration of eradication success. Typically, thresholds are set such that eradication success is declared once the PoA exceeds some value, such as 95% or 99% (e.g., Ramsey et al., Reference Ramsey, Parkes and Morrison2009, Reference Ramsey, Parkes, Will, Hanson and Campbell2011; Anderson et al., Reference Anderson, Gormley, Ramsey, Nugent, Martin, Bosson, Livingstone and Byrom2017). A stopping rule using a 95% threshold for the probability of absence is equivalent to saying that one out of 20 similar eradication attempts with equivalent effort would fail to detect survivors. The advantage of this type of stopping rule is its relative transparency; the level of certainty is clear to managers. The disadvantage of this type of stopping rule is that picking a threshold for the Type I error rate is arbitrary.
A second type of stopping rule considers both the Type I and Type II error rates, by examining the joint costs associated with these errors. These costs can be summarised as the cost of surveillance plus the expected cost that would be incurred if eradication were to be wrongly declared. The optimal time for declaring eradication successful is when the NEC is minimised (Regan et al., Reference Regan, McCarthy, Baxter, Dane Panetta and Possingham2006). A stopping rule based on minimising the NEC avoids the issue of setting a threshold for the PoA. While theoretically sound, implementing this stopping rule has practical difficulties. The main difficulty is that the expected cost of wrongly declaring successful eradication is not easily quantified. This is because these costs include both tangible costs (e.g., the cost of repeating the eradication attempt) and intangible costs (e.g., reputational costs or biodiversity loss associated with the failure to eradicate). In many eradication attempts, the intangible costs are deemed to be high, but they are difficult or even impossible to quantify (e.g., costs due to biodiversity loss). Many managers are primarily concerned with the intangible costs and thus try to minimise the Type I error. Recently, attempts have been made to address this through a utility function that considers both the cost variance and the expected costs, incorporating a parameter indicating the degree of ‘risk aversion’. This is then used to optimise the most cost-effective threshold for the PoA (Gormley et al., Reference Gormley, Anderson and Nugent2018).
Extensions to the PoA model
Extensions to the spatial PoA model have been developed, principally to allow the model to be applied to large eradication programmes (Anderson et al., Reference Anderson, Gormley, Ramsey, Nugent, Martin, Bosson, Livingstone and Byrom2017). Large (or broadscale) eradication programmes are defined as ones in which management of the species cannot occur concurrently over the entire area of interest. The eradications of Bovine Tb (Mycobacterium bovis) from wildlife in New Zealand (Livingstone et al., Reference Livingstone, Hancox, Nugent, Mackereth and Hutchings2015), fire ants (Solenopsis invicta) from south-east Queensland, Australia (Spring and Cacho, Reference Spring and Cacho2015) and nutria (Myocastor coypus) from the Delmarva Peninsula, USA (Anderson et al., Reference Anderson, Pepper, Travers, Michaels, Sullivan and Ramsey2022a) are all attempting eradications over 0.5–2.0 M ha. By necessity, these large areas are often subdivided into smaller management zones, in each of which, eradication actions operate as a single unit and are large enough to minimise the risk of reinvasion from neighbouring zones. Eradication then proceeds in two stages. Stage I involves the removal of the species, followed by confirmation phase surveillance to declare absence within each zone. Once a management zone is declared free of the species in Stage I, it then passes to Stage II and the operational resources are reallocated to the next zone. In this way, eradication proceeds progressively over the entire extent until all zones are declared free of the species (Figure 2). Importantly, once a zone progresses to Stage II, surveillance in that zone should continue, so that any residual survivors or incursions are detected. Since the majority of resources are committed to zones undergoing Stage I, Stage II surveillance data sources will usually be low-cost/low-intensity sources, such as reports from the public or other passive surveillance sources.
An important point is that all zones being declared free of the species at Stage I does not necessarily equate to a high level of confidence in eradication over the entire extent. Consider 10 management zones declared free using a 95% threshold for the PoA. Hence, each zone has a Type I error rate of 5% of being incorrectly declared free, and therefore the probability that at least one of the 10 zones has been incorrectly declared free is $ 1-{\left(1-0.05\right)}^{10} $ = 0.4, giving a PoA over the entire extent of 0.6. To achieve high confidence in eradication over the entire extent, Stage II surveillance must be used. Since the management zones have been undergoing Stage II surveillance for various periods of time (i.e., since declaration of absence of the species at the end of Stage I), calculation of the SSe for each zone needs to incorporate this variable time under surveillance. This is achieved by assuming that the residual population (if present) should increase within the zone with the passage of time. Under positive population growth, detection of a species should become more likely over time due to population increase and spread. This is reflected in the calculations of the SSe for each management zone by allowing the minimum number of occupied cells ( $ {P}_u $ ) to increase over the period of Stage II surveillance. This can be achieved, for example, by assuming that $ {P}_u $ increases according to the logistic growth function
where $ r $ equals the intrinsic growth rate and $ K $ is the carrying capacity. Assuming $ K $ is large relative to population size (as is expected in a population of residual survivors), equation (4) can be approximated by
Allowing $ {P}_u $ to increase due to equation (5) means that, even if the SSe is initially low, it will increase over time because undetected survivors would be expected to increase, making them easier to detect (Caley et al., Reference Caley, Ramsey and Barry2015; Anderson et al., Reference Anderson, Gormley, Ramsey, Nugent, Martin, Bosson, Livingstone and Byrom2017).
Approximations to the spatial PoA model
The spatial PoA model outlined above represents a flexible and powerful tool for quantifying eradication success. However, there are several limitations. Calculations of the uncertainty in the estimates of the SSe and the PoA are derived from Monte Carlo simulations based on the underlying probability distributions of the component parts (e.g., $ {g}_0 $ , $ \sigma $ , and Prior). Usually, many draws are required to reduce Monte Carlo errors, so processing models utilising data from large extents over many years is computationally expensive. Recently, analytical Bayesian solutions to the PoA model have been developed (Barnes et al., Reference Barnes, Giannini, Parsa and Ramsey2021, Reference Barnes, Parsa, Giannini and Ramsey2022). The analytical solutions are based on probability-generating functions, which fully define discrete distributions (Feller, Reference Feller1958). Using standard statistical theory, the stochastic processes in the PoA model can be expressed as compound distributions from which analytical solutions can be determined. These solutions can then provide a straightforward means of deriving posterior distributions and statistics (Barnes et al., Reference Barnes, Giannini, Parsa and Ramsey2021, Reference Barnes, Parsa, Giannini and Ramsey2022). One advantage of these analytical formulations is that they allow a more tractable analysis of surveillance design, making exploration of the cost of alternative strategies, the impacts of stochasticity and parameter uncertainty much more computationally efficient.
Outlook and future directions
Declaring successful eradication of invasive species has come a long way from the use of simple ad hoc rules that rely on a ‘wait-and-see’ approach. The proof of absence framework enables calculation of the PoA using a wide variety of surveillance types. Using the power of Bayesian updating, managers can make informed, evidence-based decisions as to whether eradication can be declared with a degree of confidence or whether more surveillance is needed. In addition, methods now exist for quantitatively assessing surveillance strategies so as to ensure that the most cost-efficient strategies are adopted for declaring eradication success.
Challenges for the implementation of these surveillance models are finding efficient ways of obtaining the parameters of the component species-specific detection probabilities for each surveillance method ( $ {g}_0 $ ), especially for novel monitoring techniques. For weed species, studies have demonstrated how detection probabilities can be related to species traits and observer experience (Garrard et al., Reference Garrard, McCarthy, Williams, Bekessy and Wintle2013) and similar trait-based models may be applicable to the detection parameters for animal species. One barrier to the uptake of analytical methods now available to managers of eradication programmes is their complexity: managers need to have some quantitative skills for their successful implementation. Current work that aims to deliver these models within a user-friendly computer programme or interface should greatly lower the barriers to their use, enabling managers to confidently determine the optimal amount of surveillance required to declare eradication, allowing more efficient use of resources.
Open peer review
To view the open peer review materials for this article, please visit http://doi.org/10.1017/ext.2023.1.
Data availability statement
No data were analysed in undertaking this review.
Author contributions
D.S.L.R. and D.P.A. conceived the scope and outline of this review and led the writing of the manuscript with significant contributions by A.M.G. All authors contributed critically to drafts and approved the final version of the manuscript.
Financial support
The authors received no financial support for the research and authorship of this manuscript.
Competing interest
The authors report no competing interest.
Comments
Prof Barry Brook/John Alroy
Editors-in-Chief
Cambridge Prisms: Extinction
Dear Sirs, In response to your recent invitation to submit an article for the inaugural edition of this journal, please find a review entitled "Invasive species eradication: how do we declare success". In this review we cover the issues and latest quantitative methods that have been developed to aid in the decision process around declaring eradication success. We hope that we have hit the mark regarding the scope and content of the review. We thank you for the invitation to contribute an article for this new journal and look forward to hearing from you in due course
Kind Regards
Dave Ramsey