Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA.
School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2022 Jun 8;289(1976):20220526. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2022.0526. Epub 2022 Jun 15.
A major challenge in sustainability science is identifying targets that maximize ecosystem benefits to humanity while minimizing the risk of crossing critical system thresholds. One critical threshold is the biomass at which populations become so depleted that their population growth rates become negative-depensation. Here, we evaluate how the value of monitoring information increases as a natural resource spends more time near the critical threshold. This benefit emerges because higher monitoring precision promotes higher yield and a greater capacity to recover from overharvest. We show that precautionary buffers that trigger increased monitoring precision as resource levels decline may offer a way to minimize monitoring costs and maximize profits. In a world of finite resources, improving our understanding of the trade-off between precision in estimates of population status and the costs of mismanagement will benefit stakeholders that shoulder the burden of these economic and social costs.
可持续性科学面临的一个主要挑战是确定目标,即在最大限度地提高生态系统对人类的效益的同时,将跨越关键系统阈值的风险最小化。一个关键的阈值是生物量,当种群减少到一定程度时,它们的种群增长率就会变为负值——补偿性减少。在这里,我们评估了自然资源在接近关键阈值时,监测信息的价值是如何随着时间的推移而增加的。这种效益的产生是因为更高的监测精度可以提高产量,并从过度捕捞中恢复的能力更强。我们表明,随着资源水平的下降,触发监测精度提高的预防缓冲措施可能是一种降低监测成本和最大化利润的方法。在资源有限的世界中,提高我们对种群状况估计精度与管理不善成本之间权衡的理解将使承担这些经济和社会成本负担的利益相关者受益。