Publication Details

Category Text Publication
Reference Category Journals
DOI 10.1111/ddi.12066
Title (Primary) Testing the focal species approach to making conservation decisions for species persistence
Author Nicholson, E.; Lindenmayer, D.B.; Frank, K. ORCID logo ; Possingham, H.
Source Titel Diversity and Distributions
Year 2013
Department OESA
Volume 19
Issue 5-6
Page From 530
Page To 540
Language englisch
Keywords Conservation planning; extinction risk; focal species; indicator species; metapopulation; population viability analysis
UFZ wide themes ru5
Abstract

Aim

Most risk assessments and decisions in conservation are based on surrogate approaches, where a group of species or environmental indicators are selected as proxies for other aspects of biodiversity. In the focal species approach, a suite of species is selected based on life history characteristics, such as dispersal limitation and area requirements. Testing the validity of the focal species concept has proved difficult, due to a lack of theory justifying the underlying framework, explicit objectives and measures of success. We sought to understand the conditions under which the focal species concept has merit for conservation decisions.

Location

Our model system comprised 10 vertebrate species in 39 patches of native forest embedded in pine plantation in New South Wales, Australia.

Methods

We selected three focal species based on ecological traits. We used a multiple-species reserve selection method that minimizes the expected loss of species, by estimating the risk of extinction with a metapopulation model. We found optimal reserve solutions for multiple species, including all 10 species, the three focal species, for all possible combinations of three species, and for each species individually.

Results

Our case study suggests that the focal species approach can work: the reserve system that minimized the expected loss of the focal species also minimized the expected species loss in the larger set of 10 species. How well the solution would perform for other species and given landscape dynamics remains unknown.

Main conclusions

The focal species approach may have merit as a conservation short cut if placed within a quantitative decision-making framework, where the aspects of biodiversity for which the focal species act as proxies are explicitly defined, and success is determined by whether the use of the proxy results in the same decision. Our methods provide a framework for testing other surrogate approaches used in conservation decision-making and risk assessment.

Persistent UFZ Identifier https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=13719
Nicholson, E., Lindenmayer, D.B., Frank, K., Possingham, H. (2013):
Testing the focal species approach to making conservation decisions for species persistence
Divers. Distrib. 19 (5-6), 530 - 540 10.1111/ddi.12066