4.7 Article

When to monitor and when to act: Value of information theory for multiple management units and limited budgets

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 5, Pages 2102-2113

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.13132

Keywords

decision theory; habitat protection; management strategy; monitoring; multiple management units; optimization; threatened species; value of information

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

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1. The question of when to monitor and when to act is fundamental to applied ecology and notoriously difficult to answer. Value of information (VOI) theory holds great promise to help answer this question for many management problems. However, VOI theory in applied ecology has only been demonstrated in single-decision problems and has lacked explicit links between monitoring and management costs. 2. Here, we present an extension of VOI theory for solving multi-unit decisions of whether to monitor before managing, while explicitly accounting for monitoring costs. Our formulation helps to choose the optimal monitoring/management strategy among groups of management units (e.g. species, habitat patches) and can be used to examine the benefits of partial and repeat monitoring. 3. To demonstrate our approach, we use case-simulated studies of single-species protection that must choose among potential habitat areas, and classification and management of multiple species threatened with extinction. We provide spreadsheets and code to illustrate the calculations and facilitate application. Our case studies demonstrate the utility of predicting the number of units with a given outcome for problems with probabilities of discrete states and the efficiency of having a flexible approach to manage according to monitoring outcomes.

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