Grantham Hedley S, Wilson Kerrie A, Moilanen Atte, Rebelo Tony, Possingham Hugh P
The Ecology Centre, University of Queensland, St Lucia, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia.
Ecol Lett. 2009 Apr;12(4):293-301. doi: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2009.01287.x. Epub 2009 Feb 20.
Decisions about where conservation actions are implemented are based on incomplete knowledge about biodiversity. The Protea Atlas is a comprehensive database, containing information collated over a decade. Using this data set in a series of retrospective simulations, we compared the outcome from different scenarios of information gain, and habitat protection and loss, over a 20-year period. We assumed that there was no information on proteas at the beginning of the simulation but knowledge improved each year. Our aim was to find out how much time we should spend collecting data before protecting habitat when there is ongoing loss of habitat. We found that, in this case, surveying for more than 2 years rarely increased the effectiveness of conservation decisions in terms of representation of proteas in protected areas and retention within the landscape. If the delay is too long, it can sometimes be more effective just using a readily available habitat map. These results reveal the opportunity costs of delaying conservation action to improve knowledge.
关于在何处实施保护行动的决策是基于对生物多样性的不完整了解做出的。帝王花地图集是一个综合数据库,包含了十多年来整理的信息。在一系列回顾性模拟中使用这个数据集,我们比较了20年期间不同信息获取、栖息地保护和丧失情景下的结果。我们假设在模拟开始时没有关于帝王花的信息,但知识水平逐年提高。我们的目标是弄清楚在栖息地持续丧失的情况下,在保护栖息地之前应该花多少时间收集数据。我们发现,在这种情况下,超过两年的调查很少能提高保护决策在保护区内帝王花代表性和景观留存方面的有效性。如果延迟太长,有时仅使用现成的栖息地地图可能会更有效。这些结果揭示了推迟保护行动以增进知识的机会成本。