Journal article

Active adaptive conservation of threatened species in the face of uncertainty

EVE Mcdonald-Madden, WJM Probert, CE Hauser, MC Runge, HP Possingham, ME Jones, JL Moore, TM Rout, PA Vesk, BA Wintle

Ecological Applications | Published : 2010

Abstract

Adaptive management has a long history in the natural resource management literature, but despite this, few practitioners have developed adaptive strategies to conserve threatened species. Active adaptive management provides a framework for valuing learning by measuring the degree to which it improves long-run management outcomes. The challenge of an active adaptive approach is to find the correct balance between gaining knowledge to improve management in the future and achieving the best short-term outcome based on current knowledge. We develop and analyze a framework for active adaptive management of a threatened species. Our case study concerns a novel facial tumor disease affecting the A..

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Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

This work evolved out of a workshop on Freycinet Peninsula in August 2007 supported by the Applied Environmental Decision Analysis Research Hub, which is funded by the Australian Government, and the Australian Research Council. We are grateful to the discussion and inspiration from all attendees of this workshop. Hamish McCallum, Shelly Lachish, and Nick Beeton provided parameter estimates for the Tasmanian devil case study. We are grateful to P. Baxter and two reviewers for comments on this manuscript.