Conservation Science and Practice (Jul 2023)

Assessing prioritization measures for a private land conservation program in the U.S. Prairie Pothole Region

  • Kaylan M. Kemink,
  • Robert. L. Pressey,
  • Vanessa M. Adams,
  • Christoph Nolte,
  • Sarah K. Olimb,
  • Aidan M. Healey,
  • Boyan Liu,
  • Todd Frerichs,
  • Randy Renner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.12939
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 7
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Private land conservation has become an important tool for protecting biodiversity and habitat, but methods for prioritizing and scheduling conservation on private land are still being developed. While return on investment methods have been suggested as a potential path forward, the different processes linking private landscapes to the socioeconomic systems in which they are embedded create unique challenges for scheduling conservation with this approach. We investigated a range of scheduling approaches within a return on investment framework for breeding waterfowl and broods in the Prairie Pothole Region of North Dakota, South Dakota, and Montana. Current conservation targeting for waterfowl in the region focuses mostly on the distribution and abundance of breeding waterfowl. We tested whether MaxGain approaches for waterfowl conservation differed from MinLoss approaches in terms of return on investment and which approach performed best in avoiding loss of waterfowl and broods separately. We also examined variation in results based upon the temporal scale of the abundance layers used for input and compared the region's current scheduling approach with results from our simulations. Our results suggested that MinLoss was the most efficient scheduling approach for both breeding waterfowl and broods and that using just breeding waterfowl to target areas for conservation programs might cause organizations to overlook important areas for broods, particularly over shorter timespans. The higher efficiency of MinLoss approaches in our simulations also indicated that incorporating probability of wetland drainage into decision‐making improved the overall return on investment. We recommend that future conservation scheduling for easements in the region and for private land conservation in general include some form of return on investment or cost‐effective analysis to make conservation more transparent.

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