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A review of selection‐based tests of abiotic surrogates for species representation
Authors:Paul Beier  Patricia Sutcliffe  Jan Hjort  Daniel P Faith  Robert L Pressey  Fabio Albuquerque
Institution:1. School of Forestry, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ, U.S.A.;2. Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, QLD, Australia;3. Department of Geography, University of Oulu, Oulu, Finland;4. The Australian Museum, Sydney, NSW, Australia;5. Center of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia
Abstract:Because conservation planners typically lack data on where species occur, environmental surrogates—including geophysical settings and climate types—have been used to prioritize sites within a planning area. We reviewed 622 evaluations of the effectiveness of abiotic surrogates in representing species in 19 study areas. Sites selected using abiotic surrogates represented more species than an equal number of randomly selected sites in 43% of tests (55% for plants) and on average improved on random selection of sites by about 8% (21% for plants). Environmental diversity (ED) (42% median improvement on random selection) and biotically informed clusters showed promising results and merit additional testing. We suggest 4 ways to improve performance of abiotic surrogates. First, analysts should consider a broad spectrum of candidate variables to define surrogates, including rarely used variables related to geographic separation, distance from coast, hydrology, and within‐site abiotic diversity. Second, abiotic surrogates should be defined at fine thematic resolution. Third, sites (the landscape units prioritized within a planning area) should be small enough to ensure that surrogates reflect species’ environments and to produce prioritizations that match the spatial resolution of conservation decisions. Fourth, if species inventories are available for some planning units, planners should define surrogates based on the abiotic variables that most influence species turnover in the planning area. Although species inventories increase the cost of using abiotic surrogates, a modest number of inventories could provide the data needed to select variables and evaluate surrogates. Additional tests of nonclimate abiotic surrogates are needed to evaluate the utility of conserving nature's stage as a strategy for conservation planning in the face of climate change.
Keywords:conservation planning  conserving nature's stage  geodiversity  incidental representation  surrogacy tests  conservar el estado de la naturaleza  geodiversidad  planeació  n de la conservació  n  pruebas de sustitució  n  representació  n secundaria
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