Florida Institute for Conservation Science and Southeastern Grasslands Initiative, Melrose, Florida, USA.
U.S. Geological Survey, Lower Mississippi-Gulf Water Science Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Conserv Biol. 2021 Dec;35(6):1715-1724. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13777. Epub 2021 Jun 28.
Despite its successes, the U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA) has proven challenging to implement due to funding limitations, workload backlog, and other problems. As threats to species survival intensify and as more species come under threat, the need for the ESA and similar conservation laws and policies in other countries to function efficiently has grown. Attempts by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) to streamline ESA decisions include multispecies recovery plans and habitat conservation plans. We address species status assessment (SSA), a USFWS process to inform ESA decisions from listing to recovery, within the context of multispecies and ecosystem planning. Although existing SSAs have a single-species focus, ecosystem-based research can efficiently inform multiple SSAs within a region and provide a foundation for transition to multispecies SSAs in the future. We considered at-risk grassland species and ecosystems within the southeastern United States, where a disproportionate number of rare and endemic species are associated with grasslands. To initiate our ecosystem-based approach, we used a combined literature-based and structured World Café workshop format to identify science needs for SSAs. Discussions concentrated on 5 categories of threats to grassland species and ecosystems, consistent with recommendations to make shared threats a focus of planning under the ESA: (1) habitat loss, fragmentation, and disruption of functional connectivity; (2) climate change; (3) altered disturbance regimes; (4) invasive species; and (5) localized impacts. For each threat, workshop participants identified science and information needs, including database availability, research priorities, and modeling and mapping needs. Grouping species by habitat and shared threats can make the SSA process and other planning processes for conservation of at-risk species worldwide more efficient and useful. We found a combination of literature review and structured discussion effective for identifying the scientific information and analysis needed to support the development of multiple SSAs. Article impact statement: Species status assessments can be improved by an ecosystem-based approach that groups imperiled species by shared habitats and threats.
尽管取得了成功,但由于资金限制、工作量积压和其他问题,美国濒危物种法案 (ESA) 的实施证明具有挑战性。随着物种生存威胁的加剧,以及更多物种受到威胁,ESA 以及其他国家类似的保护法律和政策需要更有效地发挥作用。美国鱼类和野生动物管理局 (USFWS) 简化 ESA 决策的尝试包括多物种恢复计划和栖息地保护计划。我们在多物种和生态系统规划的背景下讨论物种状况评估 (SSA),这是 USFWS 用于从列入名单到恢复的 ESA 决策的过程。尽管现有的 SSA 具有单一物种的重点,但基于生态系统的研究可以有效地为一个地区内的多个 SSA 提供信息,并为未来向多物种 SSA 过渡提供基础。我们考虑了美国东南部处于危险中的草原物种和生态系统,那里有不成比例数量的稀有和特有物种与草原有关。为了启动我们的基于生态系统的方法,我们使用了基于文献的综合方法和结构化的世界咖啡研讨会格式,以确定 SSA 的科学需求。讨论集中在 5 类威胁草原物种和生态系统的威胁上,这与建议一致,即在 ESA 下的规划中使共同威胁成为重点:(1) 栖息地丧失、破碎化和功能连接中断;(2) 气候变化;(3) 改变干扰模式;(4) 入侵物种;和 (5) 局部影响。对于每一种威胁,研讨会参与者都确定了科学和信息需求,包括数据库可用性、研究优先事项以及建模和绘图需求。按栖息地和共同威胁对物种进行分组可以使 SSA 过程和全球保护濒危物种的其他规划过程更加高效和有用。我们发现,文献综述和结构化讨论的结合对于确定支持多个 SSA 发展所需的科学信息和分析非常有效。文章影响声明:基于生态系统的方法可以通过按共同栖息地和威胁对濒危物种进行分组来改善物种状况评估。