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Evaluation of habitat suitability index models by global sensitivity and uncertainty analyses: a case study for submerged aquatic vegetation
Authors:Zuzanna Zajac  Bradley Stith  Andrea C. Bowling  Catherine A. Langtimm  Eric D. Swain
Affiliation:1. Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville, Fl, USA;2. CNB contractor to U. S. Geological Survey, Southeast Ecological Science Center, Gainesville, FL, USA;3. Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA;4. US Geological Survey, Southeast Ecological Science Center, Gainesville, FL, USA;5. US Geological Survey, Florida Water Science Center, Davie, FL, USA
Abstract:Habitat suitability index (HSI) models are commonly used to predict habitat quality and species distributions and are used to develop biological surveys, assess reserve and management priorities, and anticipate possible change under different management or climate change scenarios. Important management decisions may be based on model results, often without a clear understanding of the level of uncertainty associated with model outputs. We present an integrated methodology to assess the propagation of uncertainty from both inputs and structure of the HSI models on model outputs (uncertainty analysis: UA) and relative importance of uncertain model inputs and their interactions on the model output uncertainty (global sensitivity analysis: GSA). We illustrate the GSA/UA framework using simulated hydrology input data from a hydrodynamic model representing sea level changes and HSI models for two species of submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) in southwest Everglades National Park: Vallisneria americana (tape grass) and Halodule wrightii (shoal grass). We found considerable spatial variation in uncertainty for both species, but distributions of HSI scores still allowed discrimination of sites with good versus poor conditions. Ranking of input parameter sensitivities also varied spatially for both species, with high habitat quality sites showing higher sensitivity to different parameters than low‐quality sites. HSI models may be especially useful when species distribution data are unavailable, providing means of exploiting widely available environmental datasets to model past, current, and future habitat conditions. The GSA/UA approach provides a general method for better understanding HSI model dynamics, the spatial and temporal variation in uncertainties, and the parameters that contribute most to model uncertainty. Including an uncertainty and sensitivity analysis in modeling efforts as part of the decision‐making framework will result in better‐informed, more robust decisions.
Keywords:Everglades  habitat suitability index  sensitivity analysis  Sobol  uncertainty analysis
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