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Improving invasive ant eradication as a conservation tool : a review
BRB
Available Online

Hoffman, Benjamin ... et al.

2016
While invasive species eradications are at the forefront of biodiversity conservation, ant eradication failures are common. We reviewed ant eradications worldwide to assess the practice and identify knowledge gaps and challenges. We documented 316 eradication campaigns targeting 11 species, with most occurring in Australia covering small areas (b10 ha). Yellow crazy ant was targeted most frequently, while the bigheaded ant has been eradicated most often. Of the eradications with known outcomes, 144 campaigns were successful, totaling approximately 9500 ha, of which 8300 ha were from a single campaign that has since been partially re-invaded. Three active ingredients, often in combination, are most commonly used: fipronil, hydramethylnon, and juvenile hormone mimics. Active ingredient, bait, and method varied considerablywith respect to species targeted,which made assessing factors of eradication success challenging. We did, however, detect effects by active ingredient, number of treatments, and method on eradication success. Implementation costs increased with treatment area, and median costs were high compared to invasive mammal eradications. Ant eradications are in a phase of increased research and development, and a logical next step for practitioners is to develop best practices. A number of research themes that seek to integrate natural history with eradication strategies and methodologies would improve the ability to eradicate ants: increasing natural history and taxonomic knowledge, increasing the efficacy of active ingredients and baits, minimizing and mitigating non-target risks, developing better tools to declare eradication success, and developing alternative eradication methodologies. Invasive ant eradications are rapidly increasing in both size and frequency, and we envisage that eradicating invasive ants will increase in focus in coming decades given the increasing dispersal and subsequent impacts.
JICA's Approach to the Millennium Development Goals for inclusive and dynamic development
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JICA

2010
Shinichi Kitaoka JICA president, April 7, attended the public event to discuss are affected by the conflict, which the Brookings Institution (Washington DC) was organized, about the role of development in highly vulnerable areas, keynote with perform, it took part in the panel discussion. (In an unstable region, how to realize the development), "Securing Development in Insecure Places" in the this event, titled, US State Department of Sharon Morris Deputy Assistant Secretary (Near East, the Western Hemisphere and Europe in charge), Georgetown University Edmund • a • Walsh diplomacy School of Joel Hermann science director, Brookings Institution Bruce Jones Vice-President and foreign policy program director (or more panelists), Homi crow Senior Fellow and global economy and development program of the Institute deputy director (moderator, moderator) will participate, for the role of development aid in conflict-vulnerable region, lively discussion from a professional point of view have been made. It should be noted that, in the event, the US government, development agencies, universities and research institutes, diplomatic corps, and the private sector, NGO, mass media, etc. about 120 people took part. Kitaoka Chairman, in the keynote speech, reviewing the history of parallel Japan of international cooperation, which began from Asia and the post-war compensation, but was also failures and inadequacies, generally the experience that helped the Asian countries of the development-oriented Although it was a success, it said to have contributed significantly to job creation and poverty reduction through the stabilization of the country, the economic development.