Abstract

In May 2010 the large white butterfly, Pieris brassicae L. (Lepidoptera: Pieridae), was discovered to have established in New Zealand. It is a Palearctic species that-due to its wide host plant range within the Brassicaceae-was regarded as a risk to New Zealand's native brassicas. New Zealand has 83 native species of Brassicaceae including 81 that are endemic, and many are threatened by both habitat loss and herbivory by other organisms. Initially a program was implemented to slow its spread, then an eradication attempt commenced in November 2012. The P. brassicae population was distributed over an area of approximately 100 km2 primarily in urban residential gardens. The eradication attempt involved promoting public engagement and reports of sightings, including offering a bounty for a two week period, systematically searching gardens for P. brassicae and its host plants, removing host plants, ground-based spraying of insecticide to kill eggs and larvae, searching for pupae, capturing adults with nets, and augmenting natural enemy populations. The attempt was supported by research that helped to progressively refine the eradication strategy and evaluate its performance. The last New Zealand detection of P. brassicae occurred on 16 December 2014, the eradication program ceased on 4 June 2016 and P. brassicae was officially declared eradicated from New Zealand on 22 November 2016, 6.5 years after it was first detected and 4 years after the eradication attempt commenced. This is the first species of butterfly ever to have been eradicated worldwide.

Highlights

  • Unintentional introductions of nonnative species, including arthropods, are contributing to declining global biodiversity [1,2,3]

  • All work described in this manuscript that involved human subjects was conducted with strict adherence to legislation described in the New Zealand Biosecurity Act 1993

  • Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI)’s December 2013 review concluded that the program was being appropriately managed, it was too early to evaluate feasibility, and the program was worth continuing, but was concerned about P. brassicae escaping from the operational area [59]

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Summary

Introduction

Unintentional introductions of nonnative species, including arthropods, are contributing to declining global biodiversity [1,2,3]. Eradicating destructive nonnative species is challenging, but when successful can provide substantial benefits [4,5]. The first organised attempt to eradicate a nonnative arthropod probably began in 1890 against the gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar, in the USA [6]. Insect eradication to help protect threatened endemic plants the identities of the numerous individual properties that were sampled during this work. The data provided in S1 Data are sufficient to support the results and conclusions of the work presented in the manuscript

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