Category Archives: Endangered species management

Endangered species management

Connectivity Analysis Toolkit Beta Program

Conservation planners increasingly seek to consider both biodiversity process and pattern in reserve design. However, in part due to computational limitations, most current reserve design tools remained focused on either 1) the selection of sites that capture elements of biodiversity pattern but ignore connectivity, or 2) connectivity mapping methods that have key limitations, such as the need to identify in advance the source and target of linkages. We have developed a software ‘toolkit’ that combines several new connectivity analysis and mapping methods. These methods provide a means to quantitatively incorporate connectivity within the planning process, while overcoming some of the limitations of previous linkage mapping methods. We hope to release the software for beta testing in August-September 2010. If you would like to be informed of the availability of the beta release, please go to the
Beta release registration page


Investing in biodiversity – New paper uses stock portfolio analysis to demonstrate the value of diverse salmon stocks

Biodiversity conservation efforts often focus on preventing loss of species or ecological communities. But increasing attention is being focused on the importance of diversity below the species level, for example, between populations within a species. A new study published in the journal Conservation Letters uses economic portfolio theory to analyze data from salmon stocks in Idaho’s Snake River and Alaska’s Bristol Bay. The Idaho populations, which are heavily impacted by dams and habitat modification, were found to resemble a portfolio whose assets were highly synchronized, while the diversity among the less-impacted Alaska populations made them resemble the ideal well-balanced stock portfolio that provides constant returns over time. ‘Returns’ can be either a sustainable fishery without boom-and-bust cycles, or lower extinction risk in unharvested stocks. This lesson applies to terrestrial species as well, where inter-population diversity could aid retention of the potential to adapt to changing climates and other ecological dynamics. Although the paper’s theme is intuitive, the new methods the authors apply could help increase consideration of the value of biodiversity by policymakers.

Full article is here


The forgotten stage of forest succession: early-successional ecosystems on forest sites

A new review of the ecological role of early-successional forests by Swanson and others, including Dominick Dellasala of NCCSP, is forthcoming in the journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment. The authors conclude:
Continue reading

Species recovery as a carbon offset? Carbon credits proposed for whale conservation

In a talk on 25 February at the American Geophysical Union’s 2010 Ocean Sciences meeting in Portland, Oregon, researcher Andrew Pershing proposed that carbon credits be granted for whale conservation. Continue reading

Citizen science and its role in the emerging “Fourth Paradigm” of data-intensive science

A new paper in Nature Precedings by Fink et al. outlines how data collected by citizen-scientists can help advance research in ecology and conservation biology. Continue reading

Wolf recovery as a restoration tool

A new paper in the February issue of Bioscience  by Daniel Licht et al. proposes that recovery of wolves and other top predators

Continue reading

New Feature on the Effects of Roads and Traffic on Wildlife Populations and Landscape Function

The open-access journal Ecology and Society has just published a Special Feature on “The Effects of Roads and Traffic on Wildlife Populations and Landscape Function”. Continue reading

New science and a new management strategy for sage grouse

A new monograph on sage grouse biology, conservation, and management has been published. At the same time,  the U.S. Bureau of Land Management is directing its Wyoming offices to consider certain restrictions for oil and gas drilling, new wind turbines and other types of development in sage grouse habitat.  Continue reading

Recovery goals for keystone species

Recovery goals for endangered species are commonly based on the population size thought sufficient to ensure viability (the concept of minimum viable population or MVP). Continue reading