McDonald-Madden Eve, Baxter Peter W J, Possingham Hugh P
The Ecology Centre, The Applied Environmental Decision Analysis Centre, School of Integrative Biology, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia.
Conserv Biol. 2008 Jun;22(3):656-65. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2008.00918.x. Epub 2008 May 9.
Threatened species often exist in a small number of isolated subpopulations. Given limitations on conservation spending, managers must choose from strategies that range from managing just one subpopulation and risking all other subpopulations to managing all subpopulations equally and poorly, thereby risking the loss of all subpopulations. We took an economic approach to this problem in an effort to discover a simple rule of thumb for optimally allocating conservation effort among subpopulations. This rule was derived by maximizing the expected number of extant subpopulations remaining given n subpopulations are actually managed. We also derived a spatiotemporally optimized strategy through stochastic dynamic programming. The rule of thumb suggested that more subpopulations should be managed if the budget increases or if the cost of reducing local extinction probabilities decreases. The rule performed well against the exact optimal strategy that was the result of the stochastic dynamic program and much better than other simple strategies (e.g., always manage one extant subpopulation or half of the remaining subpopulation). We applied our approach to the allocation of funds in 2 contrasting case studies: reduction of poaching of Sumatran tigers (Panthera tigris sumatrae) and habitat acquisition for San Joaquin kit foxes (Vulpes macrotis mutica). For our estimated annual budget for Sumatran tiger management, the mean time to extinction was about 32 years. For our estimated annual management budget for kit foxes in the San Joaquin Valley, the mean time to extinction was approximately 24 years. Our framework allows managers to deal with the important question of how to allocate scarce conservation resources among subpopulations of any threatened species.
濒危物种通常存在于少数孤立的亚种群中。鉴于保护资金有限,管理者必须在多种策略中做出选择,这些策略涵盖从仅管理一个亚种群而让其他所有亚种群面临风险,到平等但低效地管理所有亚种群,从而使所有亚种群都有丧失的风险。我们采用经济方法来解决这个问题,试图找到一个简单的经验法则,以便在亚种群之间最优地分配保护工作。这个法则是通过在实际管理(n)个亚种群的情况下,使现存亚种群的预期数量最大化而推导出来的。我们还通过随机动态规划得出了一个时空优化策略。经验法则表明,如果预算增加或者降低当地灭绝概率的成本降低,就应该管理更多的亚种群。该法则与随机动态规划得出的精确最优策略相比表现良好,并且比其他简单策略(例如,始终管理一个现存亚种群或剩余亚种群的一半)要好得多。我们将我们的方法应用于两个对比案例研究中的资金分配:减少苏门答腊虎(Panthera tigris sumatrae)的偷猎以及为圣华金小狐(Vulpes macrotis mutica)获取栖息地。对于我们估计的苏门答腊虎管理年度预算,灭绝的平均时间约为32年。对于我们估计的圣华金谷小狐年度管理预算,灭绝的平均时间约为24年。我们的框架使管理者能够处理如何在任何濒危物种的亚种群之间分配稀缺保护资源这个重要问题。