Making the most of scarce data, dealing with impractical policies

On Friday, January 29th, we disussed two papers: Carvalho et al. 2010 and and Keith et al. 2009 (see full references below). The first tried to identify strategies for systematic conservation planning with incomplete datasets, while the latter highlighted the likelihood of non-analogous community formation in response to rapid climate change.

Carvalho et al. 2010. Simulating effects of using different types of species distribution data in reserve selection. Biological Conservation 143: 426-438.

Keith et al. 2009. Non-analogous community formation in response to climate change. Journal for Nature Conservation 17: 228-235.

We appreciated the great amount of effort by Carvalho et al. trying to address several questions simultaneously. They were artificially reducing the amount of data on species distribution to 50, 25 and 10% of the original dataset (which had presence/absence records of amphibians and reptiles and covered the Iberian peninsula). These datasets (and the original one) they used in four different ways: as such, fitting species distribution models to them and using the probabilities of occurrence output by the model predictions, using model predictions transformed into presences and absences and compiling “combined” datasets of predicted and observed distributions. Finally, they used the minimum set and target-based planning approaches to perform reserve selection. Ways to use data were compared according to species representation in and cost-efficiency of resulted reserve networks. They found that no one strategy was the best in all cases, but rather the preferable approach varied with data comprehensiveness.

We were a bit concerned that the numerous analyses and steps along the process may have resulted in difficulties to interpret the results of Carvalho et al. It is not always clear what exactly is causing the observed patterns. The target-based planning algorithm in Zonation raised special concerns, as it is known to come up with suboptimal results compared to continuous benefit functions. A question that remained open is which, if any, of the planning approaches resulted in better species representation than what would be expected by random. However, the main conclusion of the paper highlighted the importance of knowing (or being able to estimate) the quality of species distribution data to make good decisions, which seems to be very important.

Keith et al. point out that many of today’s conservation strategies aim at maintaining communities as they are and assign conservation status according to community composition. They raise the question of whether this strategy is meaningful in the face of climate change that affects species distributions and might drive the formation of communities whose composition is different from any communities known today.

We shared Keith et al.’s concern over assigning conservation status to areas based on the occurrence of certain species or species combinations. This may lead to unintentional degradation of biodiversity conservation, if areas lose their conservation status when species occupying them change. Perhaps a more holistic approach to evaluating conservation success than just looking at certain species at certain locations should be adopted. The benchmarking should, however, be based on solid measures to avoid woolliness. If the policies in place are suboptimal for conserving biodiversity for the future, they should be reformed to better serve their purpose.

Wright et al. 2009: The Future of Tropic…

Wright et al. 2009: The Future of Tropical Species on a Warmer Planet

This is a paper we decided to read because some papers we have previously read cited it. We thought the topic was interesting because it highlighted the tropical areas and the tropical species in relation to climate change. The authors suggest that tropical species may be particularly sensitive to global warming because of a number of factors, such as a species’ sensitivity to temperature change and proximity to cooler refuges. The analysis was done for the extant mammals and with a moderate greenhouse gas emissions scenario. Unfortunately the paper was very heavy to read and included many different aspects with land cover types, distances to potential cool refuges and habitat associations. It was difficult to keep track of what underlying data and assumptions that were behind the figures. This meant that although the paper did have some interesting points, the authors did not manage to open them up for the reader. One issue that was not discussed at all was the fact that although tropical species might be poorly adapted to changes in temperature, they are likely to be highly adapted to changes is precipitation. The paper also did not address the question what will happen with the areas where there now has been high species richness and centers of speciation, i.e. what will come in the place of the tropical species? We also saw some concerns about technical things, such as having 1960s temperatures but land use data from the 2000, and using annual mean temperatures for the analyses. Additionally, when looking at the map in figure 5 some of use pointed out that it merely seems to be a question about altitude, rather than latitude. Especially when comparing the figure to maps of present day topography of the earth. The green areas (i.e. those with least distance to refuges) are all situated in mostly mountainous areas, and do not, as the authors claim, seem to be much related to latitudes.

Wright, S.J., Muller-Landau, H.C., Schipper, J. 2009: The Future of Tropical Species on a Warmer Planet. Conservation Biology 23: 1418-1426.

doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01337.x

Norgaard 2009: Ecosystem services: From an eye-opening metaphor to a complexity blinder

Norgaard 2009: Ecosystem services: From an eye-opening metaphor to a complexity blinder

This was a nice paper about the problematics of ecosystem services, or more precisely,
its “practical” use in connection withmarket economy, rather than as a metaphor as originally intended. It has become such a fashionable concept that’s supposed to solve all the problems in the world that its effectiveness in the real world has rarely been questioned.

This was one of those papers where thoughts that at some level had already been in our minds were put into proper words, and while reading you just go “yes, exactly, I agree!”. But for the very same reason it perhaps didn’t provoke that much discussion because we didn’t find much to criticize or question in it. Although it was perhaps not the easiest paper for us ecologists to read (and could have ideally been a bit more compact too), I think we all had managed to actually read it, of which a few extra point to the author – not that common, I have to admit!

Points made by the authors (sorry for the boring bullets..)

  • ecology behind ES is not strong enough to identify levels of sustainable use
  • risk of biasing ecological research towards this ecologically very insignificant concept (see the P.S.!)
  • interactions caused by ES projects with other aspects of economy are typically ignored, which makes achieving sustainability impossible
  • many ES may have been misestimated in the past and the current situation is therefore worse than is believed and current actions are not adequate
  • ideas with a noble purpose may end up going horribly wrong when connected with market dynamics/economics. Like in the case of the REDD programme, which mostly serves the wealthy countries’ will to “continue combusting fossil hydrocarbons”.
  • What is required instead is “becoming serious about environmental governance”

Although we did enjoy the paper, at least some of us were left with a rather hopeless
feeling in the end – if the only solution really is such a massive revolution of the way basically our entire civilization works, is it ever going to happen, or are we just inevitably going to consume until we can no more, and leave a completely messed-up planet behind us? Credit to the authors though for an attempt to provide “what to do” instructions, although not as concrete as one might hope for.

All in all, we didn’t leave our pulla break too depressed, just more convinced than ever
that jumping on the ES bandwagon is not the solution to probably much anything… well, maybe a bit exaggerated, let’s go for “part of a larger solution” as Norgaard writes, assuming its dominance does not “blind us to the complexity of the challenges we actually face”.

P.S. A funny coincidence was, that on the very same day as we discussed this paper, there was the DL for a targeted call by a Finnish foundation where a major theme was research on ecosystem services. As one might guess, we didn’t apply…

doi:10.1016/j.ecolecon.2009.11.009