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SLOSS. Original habitat contains 100 species. 50% of this area can be maintained in a single large or two smaller reserves. SLOSS. Original habitat contains 100 species. 50% of this area can be maintained in a single large or two smaller reserves.
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SLOSS • Original habitat contains 100 species. 50% of this area can be maintained in a single large or two smaller reserves.
SLOSS • Original habitat contains 100 species. 50% of this area can be maintained in a single large or two smaller reserves. • Based on the species-area relationship (S = cAz where z = 0.25), the single large habitat will contain 85 species and each of the two smaller habitats will contain 70 species.
Fundamental Problems w/ ETIB? • Alternative explanations for species-area relationship • Sampling • Habitat diversity • How do we define TURNOVER? Species Area (Samples)
ETIB and Forest Reserves Pimm, S. L. 1998. Ecology: The forest fragment classic. Nature 393:23-24.
ETIB and Forest Reserves • Spp. lost in small fragments • Top predators • Primates • Army ants and company • What about frogs? • Limited by breeding sites • Peccaries
Reserve Rules vs. Reality • Reserve design will be species specific. • Reserve design will be site specific. • The idea of “optimal” reserve design may miss the point entirely. • We are rarely faced with these alternatives. • ETIB is considered by many to be a “false start” in Conservation Biology
Application of ETIB • Application of ETIB to reserve design has been widely criticized • “Faunal collapse” refers to the loss of species following insularization. • Broadly accepted • Basis for many estimates of extinction rates • Caveats • Considerable error when used for prediction
Extinctions of large mammals in parks and reserves Newmark, W. D. 1995. Extinction of mammal populations in western North American national parks. Conservation Biology 5: 67-78.
Application of ETIB McDonald, K. A., and J. H. Brown. 1992. Using montane mammals to model extinctions due to global change. Conservation Biology 6: 409-415.
Application of ETIB McDonald, K. A., and J. H. Brown. 1992. Using montane mammals to model extinctions due to global change. Conservation Biology 6: 409-415.
Application of ETIB McDonald, K. A., and J. H. Brown. 1992. Using montane mammals to model extinctions due to global change. Conservation Biology 6: 409-415.
Outline • Biodiversity Management • Equilibrium Theory of Island Biogeography • Modern Approaches • ESA • Keystone Species • Hotspots • GAP • Human Conflicts
HCP (A Preliminary Review) • Graduate seminars (106 students, 8 Universities) • Are data sufficient to support actions outlined in plan? • Data collected for 208 HCPs, Intensive analysis of 43 HCPs • species biology • threats to the species • prescribed management actions, • monitoring and plan administration • the criteria against which recovery would be measured
ESA • Backlog of unaddressed listing petitions • Failure to develop and implement recovery plans in a timely fashion • Lack of adequate funding to meet objectives • Inefficient, expensive, and biased toward “charismatic megafauna” having broad public appeal