Conservation translocations, intentional movements of species to protect against extinction, have become widespread in recent decades and are projected to increase further as biodiversity loss continues worldwide. The literature abounds with analyses to inform translocations and assess whether they are successful, but the fundamental question of whether they should be initiated at all is rarely addressed formally. We used decision analysis to assess northern leopard frog reintroduction in northern Idaho, with success defined as a population that persists for at least 50 years. The Idaho Department of Fish and Game was the decision maker (i.e., the agency that will use this assessment to inform their decisions). Stakeholders from government, indigenous groups, academia, land management agencies, and conservation organizations also participated. We built an age-structured population model to predict how management alternatives would affect probability of success. In the model, we explicitly represented epistemic uncertainty around a success criterion (probability of persistence) characterized by aleatory uncertainty. For the leading alternative, the mean probability of persistence was 40%. The distribution of the modelling results was bimodal, with most parameter combinations resulting in either very low (<5%) or relatively high (>95%) probabilities of success. Along with other considerations, including cost, the Idaho Department of Fish and Game will use this assessment to inform a decision regarding reintroduction of northern leopard frogs. Conservation translocations may benefit greatly from more widespread use of decision analysis to counter the complexity and uncertainty inherent in these decisions.

Using Decision Analysis to Determine the Feasibility of a Conservation Translocation / L.M. Keating, L. Randall, R. Stanton, C. Mccormack, M. Lucid, T. Seaborn, S.J. Converse, S. Canessa, A. Moehrenschlager. - In: DECISION ANALYSIS. - ISSN 1545-8490. - 20:4(2023 Dec), pp. 295-310. [10.1287/deca.2023.0472]

Using Decision Analysis to Determine the Feasibility of a Conservation Translocation

S. Canessa
Penultimo
;
2023

Abstract

Conservation translocations, intentional movements of species to protect against extinction, have become widespread in recent decades and are projected to increase further as biodiversity loss continues worldwide. The literature abounds with analyses to inform translocations and assess whether they are successful, but the fundamental question of whether they should be initiated at all is rarely addressed formally. We used decision analysis to assess northern leopard frog reintroduction in northern Idaho, with success defined as a population that persists for at least 50 years. The Idaho Department of Fish and Game was the decision maker (i.e., the agency that will use this assessment to inform their decisions). Stakeholders from government, indigenous groups, academia, land management agencies, and conservation organizations also participated. We built an age-structured population model to predict how management alternatives would affect probability of success. In the model, we explicitly represented epistemic uncertainty around a success criterion (probability of persistence) characterized by aleatory uncertainty. For the leading alternative, the mean probability of persistence was 40%. The distribution of the modelling results was bimodal, with most parameter combinations resulting in either very low (<5%) or relatively high (>95%) probabilities of success. Along with other considerations, including cost, the Idaho Department of Fish and Game will use this assessment to inform a decision regarding reintroduction of northern leopard frogs. Conservation translocations may benefit greatly from more widespread use of decision analysis to counter the complexity and uncertainty inherent in these decisions.
English
conservation translocation; feasibility assessment; northern leopard frog; reintroduction; structured decision making;
Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
Goal 15: Life on land
dic-2023
mar-2023
INFORMS Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences
20
4
295
310
16
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
orcid
crossref
wos
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Using Decision Analysis to Determine the Feasibility of a Conservation Translocation / L.M. Keating, L. Randall, R. Stanton, C. Mccormack, M. Lucid, T. Seaborn, S.J. Converse, S. Canessa, A. Moehrenschlager. - In: DECISION ANALYSIS. - ISSN 1545-8490. - 20:4(2023 Dec), pp. 295-310. [10.1287/deca.2023.0472]
open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
9
262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
L.M. Keating, L. Randall, R. Stanton, C. Mccormack, M. Lucid, T. Seaborn, S.J. Converse, S. Canessa, A. Moehrenschlager
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1040192
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