University of California, Santa Cruz, California, United States of America.
California Department of Fish and Wildlife, Belmont, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Jun 19;13(6):e0199126. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0199126. eCollection 2018.
There are numerous reasons to conduct scientific research within protected areas, but research activities may also negatively impact organisms and habitats, and thus conflict with a protected area's conservation goals. We developed a quantitative ecological decision-support framework that estimates these potential impacts so managers can weigh costs and benefits of proposed research projects and make informed permitting decisions. The framework generates quantitative estimates of the ecological impacts of the project and the cumulative impacts of the proposed project and all other projects in the protected area, and then compares the estimated cumulative impacts of all projects with policy-based acceptable impact thresholds. We use a series of simplified equations (models) to assess the impacts of proposed research to: a) the population of any targeted species, b) the major ecological assemblages that make up the community, and c) the physical habitat that supports protected area biota. These models consider both targeted and incidental impacts to the ecosystem and include consideration of the vulnerability of targeted species, assemblages, and habitats, based on their recovery time and ecological role. We parameterized the models for a wide variety of potential research activities that regularly occur in the study area using a combination of literature review and expert judgment with a precautionary approach to uncertainty. We also conducted sensitivity analyses to examine the relationships between model input parameters and estimated impacts to understand the dominant drivers of the ecological impact estimates. Although the decision-support framework was designed for and adopted by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife for permitting scientific studies in the state-wide network of marine protected areas (MPAs), the framework can readily be adapted for terrestrial and freshwater protected areas.
在保护区内进行科学研究有很多原因,但研究活动也可能对生物和栖息地产生负面影响,从而与保护区的保护目标产生冲突。我们开发了一种定量生态决策支持框架,可以评估这些潜在影响,以便管理者权衡拟议研究项目的成本和收益,并做出明智的许可决策。该框架生成项目的生态影响以及保护区内拟议项目和所有其他项目的累积影响的定量估计,然后将所有项目的估计累积影响与基于政策的可接受影响阈值进行比较。我们使用一系列简化的方程(模型)来评估拟议研究对以下方面的影响:a)任何目标物种的种群,b)构成群落的主要生态组合,以及 c)支持保护区生物区系的物理栖息地。这些模型既考虑了对生态系统的有针对性影响,也考虑了对生态系统的附带影响,并考虑了目标物种、组合和栖息地的脆弱性,这取决于它们的恢复时间和生态角色。我们使用文献综述和专家判断,并采用谨慎的方法处理不确定性,针对研究区域中经常发生的各种潜在研究活动对模型进行了参数化。我们还进行了敏感性分析,以检查模型输入参数与估计影响之间的关系,以了解生态影响估计的主要驱动因素。尽管决策支持框架是专为加利福尼亚鱼类和野生动物部设计并用于在全州海洋保护区(MPA)网络中许可科学研究而采用的,但该框架可以很容易地适应陆地和淡水保护区。