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Bet-hedging applications for conservation
Authors:Mark S Boyce  Eileen M Kirsch  Christopher Servheen
Institution:(1) Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, T6G 2E9 Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;(2) US Geological Survey, Division of Biological Resources, Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center, 2630 Fanta Reed Road, 54603 La Crosse, WI, USA;(3) US Fish and Wildlife Service, University of Montana, 59812 Missoula, MT, USA
Abstract:One of the early tenets of conservation biology is that population viability is enhanced by maintaining multiple populations of a species. The strength of this tenet is justified by principles of bet-hedging. Management strategies that reduce variance in population size will also reduce risk of extinction. Asynchrony in population fluctuations in independent populations reduces variance in the aggregate of populations whereas environmental correlation among areas increases the risk that all populations will go extinct. We review the theoretical rationale of bet-hedging and suggest applications for conservation management of least terns in Nebraska and grizzly bears in the northern Rocky Mountains of the United States. The risk of extinction for least terns will be reduced if we can sustain the small central Platte River population in addition to the larger population on the lower Platte. Similarly, by restoring grizzly bears to the Bitterroot wilderness of Idaho and Montana can reduce the probability of extinction for grizzly bears in the Rocky Mountains of the United States by as much as 69–93%.
Keywords:Bet hedging  Bitterroot wilderness  environmental correlation  grizzly bear  least tern            Sterna antillarum                      Ursus arctos horribilis
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