“…Our simulations further suggested that where disease surveillance is inexpensive (e.g., because the cost per surveillance unit is low and/or because the surveillance sensitivity per unit is high), then the optimal stopping threshold will be higher rather than lower—in other words—it would be cheaper, on average, to minimize the risk of failure (i.e., making a false declaration of freedom from M. bovis infection) than it would be to remedy any such failure. Although we compared only two alternative surveillance tools here (leg‐hold traps alone, or DDs (chew‐cards) with follow‐up trapping), there are other options for surveillance of residual M. bovis infection in possums in New Zealand—most notably—the use of wildlife spillover hosts as sentinels for persistent infection (e.g., feral pigs and ferrets and wild deer; Nugent, ; Anderson et al., ). In particular, feral pigs are especially sensitive detectors of persistent M. bovis infection in possums (Nugent, Gortazar, & Knowles, ; Nugent, Whitford, & Young, ; Nugent, Yockney, Whitford, & Cross, ), so where they are abundant and inexpensive to procure—a high stopping threshold would be optimal.…”