Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, 48824, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2017 Sep;27(6):1916-1931. doi: 10.1002/eap.1577. Epub 2017 Aug 15.
Identifying appropriate strategies for sustainable harvest is a challenge for many terrestrial vertebrate species because of uncertain system dynamics, limited data to inform population models, and potentially conflicting objectives that seek to harvest and maintain populations at desirable levels. The absence of monitoring and assessment infrastructure needed to regularly estimate abundance accentuates this challenge for many species, and limits application of rigorous state-dependent frameworks for decision making that are commonly advocated in natural resource management. Reference points, which define management targets or triggers for changing management, are often used to guide decision-making, but suffer from ambiguity when developed without explicit consideration of uncertainty or trade-offs among competing objectives. We describe an approach for developing unambiguous target reference points for assessment-limited species using structured decision making, and demonstrate the approach to develop target harvest rates for management of fall Wild Turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) harvests in the face of uncertain population and harvest dynamics. We use simulation and decision analyses to identify harvest rates that are optimal for accomplishing explicit management objectives in the face of uncertainty, and harvest rates with robust performance over broad regions of the demographic and harvest model parameter space. We demonstrate that population and harvest parameters commonly uncertain to wildlife managers interact to determine appropriate target harvest rates for Wild Turkeys, and that formally acknowledging a range of plausible values for structurally uncertain parameters results in more conservative target reference points than suggested by previously published studies. The structured decision making framework described here provides a natural conceptual and quantitative framework for extending our approach to develop unambiguous harvest targets for other assessment-limited wildlife populations while formally acknowledging structural uncertainty in system dynamics.
确定可持续收获的适当策略对许多陆生脊椎动物来说是一个挑战,因为系统动态不确定、用于人口模型的有限数据以及旨在以理想水平收获和维持种群的潜在冲突目标。对于许多物种来说,缺乏定期评估丰富度所需的监测和评估基础设施加剧了这一挑战,并限制了在自然资源管理中通常提倡的严格依赖状态的决策框架的应用。参考点用于指导决策,定义了管理目标或改变管理的触发因素,但如果在没有明确考虑不确定性或竞争目标之间的权衡的情况下制定,则存在模糊性。我们描述了一种使用结构化决策制定为评估受限物种制定明确目标参考点的方法,并演示了如何针对不确定的种群和收获动态,为管理秋季野生火鸡(Meleagris gallopavo)收获制定目标收获率。我们使用模拟和决策分析来确定在不确定情况下实现明确管理目标的最佳收获率,以及在人口和收获模型参数空间的广泛区域具有稳健性能的收获率。我们证明了通常对野生动物管理者不确定的种群和收获参数相互作用,以确定野生火鸡的适当目标收获率,并且正式承认结构不确定参数的一系列合理值会导致比以前发表的研究建议更保守的目标参考点。这里描述的结构化决策制定框架为扩展我们的方法提供了一个自然的概念和定量框架,以制定其他评估受限野生动物种群的明确收获目标,同时正式承认系统动态中的结构不确定性。