4.6 Article

How to choose a cost-effective indicator to trigger conservation decisions?

期刊

METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 12, 期 3, 页码 520-529

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/2041-210X.13532

关键词

cost-effectiveness; indicator selection; indicator species; livestock grazing; management; multiple threats; prescribed burning; prioritisation

类别

资金

  1. Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, Australian Research Council
  2. University of Queensland
  3. ARC Future Fellowship
  4. ARC DECRA Fellowship

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The text discusses the complexity of monitoring multiple threats faced by ecological systems and highlights the importance of selecting optimal indicators for effective management. It introduces a decision framework that evaluates indicators based on criteria such as monitoring efficiency, management outcomes, and economic constraints. The study uses a case study in the Kimberley region to demonstrate how indicator selection can improve management decisions under limited resources and how uncertainty in decision factors can influence indicator selection.
1. Effective biodiversity conservation requires responding to threats in a timely fashion. This requires understanding the impacts of threats on biodiversity and when management needs to be implemented. However, most ecological systems face multiple threats, so monitoring to assess their impacts on biodiversity is a complex task. Indicators help simplify the challenge of monitoring but choosing the best indicator(s) to inform management is not straightforward. 2. We provide a decision framework that can help identify optimal indicators to trigger management in a system faced with multiple threats. The approach evaluates indicators based on criteria spanning monitoring efficiency, management outcomes and the economic constraints for decision-making. Critical decision factors (or parameters) are identified and detailed in a six-step process to estimate the cost-effectiveness of alternate indicators, including threat impacts, sensitivity of indicators to detect change, and the benefits, costs and feasibility of alternative indicators and management actions. 3. Using the Kimberley as a case study, we evaluate 18 indicators for informing management of three key threats in the region: fire and grazing, feral cat predation, and weeds. We show that indicator selection based on our approach can help improve the expected outcome of management decisions under limited resources. By accounting for multiple factors in estimating benefit and costs of monitoring, our approach improves on common approaches that select indicators based only on whether they are sensitive to change and/or cheap to monitor. We also identify how uncertainty in decision factors influences indicator selection. 4. Although cost-effectiveness analyses are gaining popularity, ours is the first study to integrate multiple selection criteria using a return on investment framework to compare indicators for monitoring multiple threats and triggering management.

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