Journal article
Linking Indices for Biodiversity Monitoring to Extinction Risk Theory
MA Mccarthy, AL Moore, J Krauss, JW Morgan, CF Clements
Conservation Biology | Published : 2014
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.12308
Abstract
Biodiversity indices often combine data from different species when used in monitoring programs. Heuristic properties can suggest preferred indices, but we lack objective ways to discriminate between indices with similar heuristics. Biodiversity indices can be evaluated by determining how well they reflect management objectives that a monitoring program aims to support. For example, the Convention on Biological Diversity requires reporting about extinction rates, so simple indices that reflect extinction risk would be valuable. We developed 3 biodiversity indices that are based on simple models of population viability that relate extinction risk to abundance. We based the first index on the ..
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Awarded by European Commission
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was supported by an Australian Research Council (ARC) Future Fellowship to M. A. M. (FT100100923) and the ARC Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions. We thank J. Baumgartner for help with collating the data on bird abundances, B. Collen for providing values for the LPI of birds, and J. Moore, R. Gregory, R. Camp, and 2 anonymous reviewers for comments on a draft manuscript. We are grateful to etc.usf.edu for access to the images of organisms in Fig. 1.