Holden Matthew H, McDonald-Madden Eve
Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia; School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia.
Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia; School of Earth & Environmental Science, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland, 4072, Australia.
J Theor Biol. 2017 Sep 21;429:170-180. doi: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2017.06.019. Epub 2017 Jun 29.
Consumer demand for plant and animal products threatens many populations with extinction. The anthropogenic Allee effect (AAE) proposes that such extinctions can be caused by prices for wildlife products increasing with species rarity. This price-rarity relationship creates financial incentives to extract the last remaining individuals of a population, despite higher search and harvest costs. The AAE has become a standard approach for conceptualizing the threat of economic markets on endangered species. Despite its potential importance for conservation, AAE theory is based on a simple graphical model with limited analysis of possible population trajectories. By specifying a general class of functions for price-rarity relationships, we show that the classic theory can understate the risk of species extinction. AAE theory proposes that only populations below a critical Allee threshold will go extinct due to increasing price-rarity relationships. Our analysis shows that this threshold can be much higher than the original theory suggests, depending on initial harvest effort. More alarmingly, even species with population sizes above this Allee threshold, for which AAE predicts persistence, can be destined to extinction. Introducing even a minimum price for harvested individuals, close to zero, can cause large populations to cross the classic anthropogenic Allee threshold on a trajectory towards extinction. These results suggest that traditional AAE theory may give a false sense of security when managing large harvested populations.
消费者对动植物产品的需求正威胁着许多物种走向灭绝。人为阿利效应(AAE)表明,此类灭绝可能是由于野生动物产品价格随物种稀有性增加所致。这种价格与稀有性的关系产生了经济诱因,促使人们捕获种群中最后剩下的个体,尽管搜寻和捕获成本更高。AAE已成为一种概念化经济市场对濒危物种威胁的标准方法。尽管其对保护工作具有潜在重要性,但AAE理论基于一个简单的图形模型,对可能的种群轨迹分析有限。通过为价格与稀有性的关系指定一类通用函数,我们表明经典理论可能低估了物种灭绝的风险。AAE理论提出,只有低于临界阿利阈值的种群才会因价格与稀有性关系的增加而灭绝。我们的分析表明,根据初始捕获努力程度,这个阈值可能比原理论所表明的要高得多。更令人担忧的是,即使是种群规模高于此阿利阈值的物种(AAE预测其会持续存在)也可能注定灭绝。即使对捕获个体设定一个接近零的最低价格,也可能导致大量种群越过经典的人为阿利阈值,走上灭绝之路。这些结果表明,在管理大量被捕捞种群时,传统的AAE理论可能会给人一种错误的安全感。