Development and Delivery of Species Distribution Models to Inform Decision-Making

Author:

Sofaer Helen R1ORCID,Jarnevich Catherine S1,Pearse Ian S1,Smyth Regan L2,Auer Stephanie2,Cook Gericke L3,Edwards Thomas C4,Guala Gerald F5,Howard Timothy G6,Morisette Jeffrey T7,Hamilton Healy2

Affiliation:

1. US Geological Survey's Fort Collins Science Center, in Fort Collins, Colorado

2. NatureServe, in Arlington, Virginia

3. US Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, in Fort Collins, Colorado

4. US Geological Survey's Utah Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, in Logan, Utah

5. US Geological Survey's Science Analytics and Synthesis Program, Core Science Systems, in Reston, Virginia

6. New York Natural Heritage Program, a program of the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry, in Albany, New York

7. National Invasive Species Council Secretariat, US Department of the Interior, in Washington, DC

Abstract

Abstract Information on where species occur is an important component of conservation and management decisions, but knowledge of distributions is often coarse or incomplete. Species distribution models provide a tool for mapping habitat and can produce credible, defensible, and repeatable information with which to inform decisions. However, these models are sensitive to data inputs and methodological choices, making it important to assess the reliability and utility of model predictions. We provide a rubric that model developers can use to communicate a model's attributes and its appropriate uses. We emphasize the importance of tailoring model development and delivery to the species of interest and the intended use and the advantages of iterative modeling and validation. We highlight how species distribution models have been used to design surveys for new populations, inform spatial prioritization decisions for management actions, and support regulatory decision-making and compliance, tying these examples back to our model assessment rubric.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences

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