Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources, University of Georgia, Athens, 180 East Green Street, Georgia, 30602, USA.
U.S. Geological Survey, Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center, Missoula, Montana, 59801, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2020 Mar;30(2):e02038. doi: 10.1002/eap.2038. Epub 2019 Dec 11.
Conservation of at-risk species is aided by reliable forecasts of the consequences of environmental change and management actions on population viability. Forecasts from conventional population viability analysis (PVA) are made using a two-step procedure in which parameters are estimated, or elicited from expert opinion, and then plugged into a stochastic population model without accounting for parameter uncertainty. Recently developed statistical PVAs differ because forecasts are made conditional on models fitted to empirical data. The statistical forecasting approach allows for uncertainty about parameters, but it has rarely been applied in metapopulation contexts where spatially explicit inference is needed about colonization and extinction dynamics and other forms of stochasticity that influence metapopulation viability. We conducted a statistical metapopulation viability analysis (MPVA) using 11 yr of data on the federally threatened Chiricahua leopard frog (Lithobates chiricahuensis) to forecast responses to landscape heterogeneity, drought, environmental stochasticity, and management. We evaluated several future environmental scenarios and pond restoration options designed to reduce extinction risk. Forecasts over a 50-yr time horizon indicated that metapopulation extinction risk was <4% for all scenarios, but uncertainty was high. Without pond restoration, extinction risk is forecasted to be 3.9% (95% CI 0-37%) by year 2066. Restoring six ponds by increasing their hydroperiod reduced extinction risk to <1% and greatly reduced uncertainty (95% CI 0-2%). Our results suggest that managers can mitigate the impacts of drought and environmental stochasticity on metapopulation viability by maintaining ponds that hold water throughout the year and keeping them free of invasive predators. Our study illustrates the utility of the spatially explicit statistical forecasting approach to MPVA in conservation planning efforts.
保护濒危物种需要可靠的预测,即环境变化和管理措施对种群生存力的影响。传统的种群生存力分析(PVA)预测是通过两步程序进行的,其中参数是通过估计或从专家意见中得出的,然后插入到不考虑参数不确定性的随机种群模型中。最近开发的统计 PVA 不同之处在于,预测是根据拟合经验数据的模型做出的。统计预测方法考虑了参数的不确定性,但在需要对空间明确的定居和灭绝动态以及影响复合种群生存力的其他形式的随机性进行推断的复合种群背景下,这种方法很少得到应用。我们使用了 11 年的 Chiricahua 豹蛙(Lithobates chiricahuensis)联邦受威胁数据进行了统计复合种群生存力分析(MPVA),以预测对景观异质性、干旱、环境随机性和管理的反应。我们评估了几种未来环境情景和池塘恢复方案,旨在降低灭绝风险。在 50 年的时间跨度内进行的预测表明,所有情景下复合种群灭绝风险都<4%,但不确定性很高。如果不进行池塘恢复,到 2066 年,灭绝风险预计将达到 3.9%(95%CI 0-37%)。通过增加其水期来恢复六个池塘,将灭绝风险降低到<1%,并大大降低了不确定性(95%CI 0-2%)。我们的研究结果表明,管理者可以通过维护全年蓄水的池塘并防止入侵性捕食者进入,来减轻干旱和环境随机性对复合种群生存力的影响。我们的研究说明了空间明确的统计预测方法在保护规划工作中的效用。