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Crop Damage by Wild Herbivores:Insights Obtained from Optimization Models


Affiliations
1 Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Homi Bhabha Road, Pashan, Pune 411 008, India
2 Department of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Pondicherry University, R.V. Nagar, Kalapet, Puducherry 605 014, India
 

We constructed a theoretical model of cost-benefit optimization for farmers who face continued economic loss due to crop raiding by wild herbivores, as well as for the wild herbivores that do so. Insights obtained from the model include: (i) In sustenance agriculture, a farmer needs to optimize net benefit rather than benefit-to-cost ratio, whereas herbivores need to optimize the benefit-to-cost ratio. (ii) It is imperative for a farmer to disinvest from agricultural inputs when threatened by depredation. (iii) Many mitigation measures that are highly successful on an experimental scale are most likely to fail when used on a mass scale. (iv) The effectiveness of mitigation measures such as fencing, trenching and culling will be non-monotonic, being counterproductive under certain conditions.

Keywords

Agricultural Economics, Cost–Benefit Optimization, Crop Depredation, Optimal Foraging, Wildlife Management.
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  • Crop Damage by Wild Herbivores:Insights Obtained from Optimization Models

Abstract Views: 245  |  PDF Views: 70

Authors

Milind Watve
Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Homi Bhabha Road, Pashan, Pune 411 008, India
Abhijeet Bayani
Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Homi Bhabha Road, Pashan, Pune 411 008, India
Samriddha Ghosh
Department of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Pondicherry University, R.V. Nagar, Kalapet, Puducherry 605 014, India

Abstract


We constructed a theoretical model of cost-benefit optimization for farmers who face continued economic loss due to crop raiding by wild herbivores, as well as for the wild herbivores that do so. Insights obtained from the model include: (i) In sustenance agriculture, a farmer needs to optimize net benefit rather than benefit-to-cost ratio, whereas herbivores need to optimize the benefit-to-cost ratio. (ii) It is imperative for a farmer to disinvest from agricultural inputs when threatened by depredation. (iii) Many mitigation measures that are highly successful on an experimental scale are most likely to fail when used on a mass scale. (iv) The effectiveness of mitigation measures such as fencing, trenching and culling will be non-monotonic, being counterproductive under certain conditions.

Keywords


Agricultural Economics, Cost–Benefit Optimization, Crop Depredation, Optimal Foraging, Wildlife Management.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv111%2Fi5%2F861-867