Using resiliency, redundancy, and representation in a Bayesian belief network to assess imperilment of riverine fishes

Author:

Dunn Corey G.12ORCID,Schumann David A.3ORCID,Colvin Michael E.24ORCID,Sleezer Logan J.24ORCID,Wagner Matthew5ORCID,Jones‐Farrand D. Todd6ORCID,Rivenbark Erin7ORCID,McRae Sarah7ORCID,Evans Kristine2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Geological Survey, Mississippi Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit Mississippi State Mississippi USA

2. Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Aquaculture Mississippi State University Mississippi State Mississippi USA

3. Department of Biology and River Studies Center University of Wisconsin‐La Crosse La Crosse Wisconsin USA

4. U.S. Geological Survey, Columbia Environmental Research Center Columbia Missouri USA

5. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Ecological Services, Southeast Region Jackson Mississippi USA

6. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Science Applications, Southeast Region Columbia Missouri USA

7. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Ecological Services, Southeast Region Atlanta Georgia USA

Abstract

AbstractConservation prioritization frameworks are used worldwide to identify species at greatest risk of extinction and to allocate limited resources across regions, species, and populations. Conservation prioritization can be impeded by ecological knowledge gaps and data deficiency, especially in freshwater species inhabiting highly complex aquatic ecosystems. Therefore, we developed a flexible approach that calculates a species' imperilment risk based on the conservation principles of resiliency, redundancy, and representation (i.e., the “three R's”). Our approach organizes data on species traits, distributions, population connectivity, and threats within a Bayesian belief network capable of predicting resiliency and redundancy within representative ecological settings. Empirical data and expert judgment inform the model to provide robust and repeatable risk assessments for rare and data‐deficient species. The model calculates resiliency at hierarchical spatial scales from distributional trends and population strength. Redundancy is estimated from the connectivity and quantities of extant populations. Resiliency, redundancy, and species' inherent vulnerability based on species traits collectively estimate extirpation risk within each unique ecological setting. Extirpation risks across ecological settings characterize representation and are aggregated to estimate global imperilment risk. We demonstrate the model's utility with Piebald Madtom (Noturus gladiator), a species petitioned for listing under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. Our results revealed that resiliency, redundancy, and extirpation risks can vary spatially across the species' range while identifying populations where additional sampling could disproportionally reduce uncertainty in estimated global imperilment risk. Our approach could standardize and expedite conservation status assessments, identify opportunities for early management intervention of at‐risk species and populations, and strategically reduce uncertainty by focusing monitoring and research on priority information gaps.

Publisher

Wiley

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