The importance of in situ site loss in nature reserve selection: Balancing notions of complementarity and robustness |
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Authors: | Jesse Rush O&rsquo Hanley,Richard L. Church |
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Affiliation: | a Kent Business School, University of Kent, Wye Campus, Wye, Ashford TN25 5AH, United Kingdom b Department of Geography, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-4060, USA c Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California, Berkeley, 207 Giannini Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720-3310, USA |
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Abstract: | Because the threat of habitat destruction can never be entirely eliminated, there is a legitimate concern that some reserve networks, especially highly complementary ones with minimal species overlap, may be predisposed to severe losses in species representation if one or more core reserve sites are destroyed. In order to address this problem in a systematic way, we propose the use of two different optimization models for designing complementary reserve networks that are also highly robust to possible site losses. Given limited budgets, the first maximizes expected species representation over all possible site loss patterns while the second maximizes a combination of representation given all sites and remaining representation following the worst-case loss of a restricted subset of reserve sites. By incorporating reserve loss in fundamentally different ways, these two models provide a range of options in terms of information requirements, assumptions about risk aversion, and structural complexity. We compare both of these methods to a more standard approach, which completely ignores the inherent risk posed by reserve site loss. Results confirm that significantly more robust solutions can be obtained for a marginal decrease in initial species representation within the reserve system. |
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Keywords: | Reserve selection Site loss uncertainty Reserve loss Complementarity Robustness Maximum covering Maximum expected covering Bilevel programming |
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