Halsing David L, Moore Michael R
U.S. Geological Survey, U.S. Department of the Interior, Menlo Park, CA 94025, USA.
Conserv Biol. 2008 Apr;22(2):338-50. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2008.00913.x.
The mandate to increase endangered salmon populations in the Columbia River Basin of North America has created a complex, controversial resource-management issue. We constructed an integrated assessment model as a tool for analyzing biological-economic trade-offs in recovery of Snake River spring- and summer-run chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha). We merged 3 frameworks: a salmon-passage model to predict migration and survival of smolts; an age-structured matrix model to predict long-term population growth rates of salmon stocks; and a cost-effectiveness analysis to determine a set of least-cost management alternatives for achieving particular population growth rates. We assessed 6 individual salmon-management measures and 76 management alternatives composed of one or more measures. To reflect uncertainty, results were derived for different assumptions of effectiveness of smolt transport around dams. Removal of an estuarine predator, the Caspian Tern (Sterna caspia), was cost-effective and generally increased long-term population growth rates regardless of transport effectiveness. Elimination of adult salmon harvest had a similar effect over a range of its cost estimates. The specific management alternatives in the cost-effective set depended on assumptions about transport effectiveness. On the basis of recent estimates of smolt transport effectiveness, alternatives that discontinued transportation or breached dams were prevalent in the cost-effective set, whereas alternatives that maximized transportation dominated if transport effectiveness was relatively high. More generally, the analysis eliminated 80-90% of management alternatives from the cost-effective set. Application of our results to salmon management is limited by data availability and model assumptions, but these limitations can help guide research that addresses critical uncertainties and information. Our results thus demonstrate that linking biology and economics through integrated models can provide valuable tools for science-based policy and management.
增加北美哥伦比亚河流域濒危鲑鱼数量的任务引发了一个复杂且具争议性的资源管理问题。我们构建了一个综合评估模型,作为分析蛇河春季和夏季洄游的奇努克鲑(Oncorhynchus tshawytscha)恢复过程中生物 - 经济权衡的工具。我们整合了3个框架:一个鲑鱼洄游模型,用于预测幼鱼的洄游和存活情况;一个年龄结构矩阵模型,用于预测鲑鱼种群的长期增长率;以及成本效益分析,以确定实现特定种群增长率的一组成本最低的管理方案。我们评估了6项单独的鲑鱼管理措施以及由一项或多项措施组成的76种管理方案。为反映不确定性,针对大坝周围幼鱼运输有效性的不同假设得出了结果。移除河口捕食者里海鸬鹚(Sterna caspia)具有成本效益,并且无论运输有效性如何,通常都会提高长期种群增长率。在其一系列成本估计范围内,取消成年鲑鱼捕捞也有类似效果。成本效益方案中的具体管理方案取决于对运输有效性的假设。根据近期对幼鱼运输有效性的估计,在成本效益方案中,停止运输或拆除大坝的方案较为普遍,而如果运输有效性相对较高,则以最大化运输的方案为主导。更一般地说,该分析从成本效益方案中剔除了80% - 90%的管理方案。我们的结果应用于鲑鱼管理受到数据可用性和模型假设的限制,但这些限制有助于指导解决关键不确定性和信息的研究。因此,我们的结果表明,通过综合模型将生物学和经济学联系起来可为基于科学的政策和管理提供有价值的工具。