Lecture 36- Conservation tools II Flashcards
What are the 3 tools we will talk about?
Inferring risk of extinction - Solow’s equation - surrogates - PVA
What is risk?
Three Components of Risk: 1. the probability that an event will occur in particular time frame 2. a measure of the consequences of the event 3. a time frame over which risk is considered • e.g. “there is a 5% probability that the population will become extinct within the next 50 years”
What is a herbaria and a museum?
-collection of data about plant and animal species -information about species
What is the Solow’s equation?
- equation to calculate probability of extinctions from obseravtions
- probability that a species is extant (still around)
- Tn is the date of the most recent sighting
Tn-1 is the date of the second most recent sighting
T is the date of the end of the observation period
What is the example of using Solow’s equation?
- probability that species is extinct is 1-the probability that it is extant
- if p extant= 0.1 so the p extinct= 0.9
- what doesn’t the equation take into account is how hard it is to find the individuals etc.
What can you measure if don’t have the data needed for Solow’s equation?
• We don’t always have the data at hand to calculate the risk of extinction… • Measures to represent risk of extinction can include: – Range contraction – Population decline – Changes in ecological processes – Changes in ecosystem composition – Changes in physico-chemical processes (flows of energy and nutrients) …How much change is acceptable?
What are the IUCN red list categories?
-each 5 years the countries reasses the state of species on the red list -Extinct (EX) -Extinct in the wild (EW) -Threatened: Critically Endangered (CR) Endangered (EN) Vulnerable (VU) -Low Risk (LR) -Data Deficient (DD) -Not Evaluated (NE)
What does critically endangered mean?
• Critically endangered = 50% chance of extinction over 10 years
What does endangered mean?
• Endangered = 20% chance of extinction over 20 years
What does vulnerable mean?
• Vulnerable = 10% chance of extinction over 100 years
What rules does IUCN use to asses risk?
-(most) IUCN rules employ surrogates of extinction risk -A-D are surrogates of extinction risk -Rule A: Reduction in population size -Rule B: Restricted range and a combination of: - severely fragmented - continuing decline - extreme fluctuation -Rule C: Small population size with a continuing decline Rule D: Small population size -Rule E: Risk of Extinction (a direct measure using PVA)= can use mathematical data,skills to asses the risk -we have to be careful as they are not always tested
What is PVA (population viability analysis)?
-A PVA is a mathematical representation of what we believe to be true about the ecology and dynamics of a species or population. -It has three main uses: 1. Guiding data collection(examine uncertainty) 2. Ranking threatened species 3. Assisting management decisions (e.g.payoff curves) -the thing it is the harder the PVA get the harder it is to scrutinize
What is the basic population model?
- Nt+1= population next year
- Nt= population this year
- B= births
- D= deaths
- I= immigration
- E= emmigrants
- also need to take into account other forces that affect the extinction and survival (next question)
What are the extinction processes?
- Deterministic forces 2. Stochastic factors • demographic stochasticity (sth. about randomness about death and birth rates) • environmental stochasticity (can have good and bad years) • genetic stochasticity (have sublethal alleles, if combine can have lethal) • Spatial variation • catastrophes (floods, fire etc.)
How can you model demographic stochasticty?
- really important for small populations
- N(t) = pop next year
- N(t+1) = pop. this year
- f = fecundity rate
- s = survival rate
- r = growth rate
- if r is 1 then population is constant, if greater than 1 then exponentially increasing population, when less than one then in decline