Abstract

When evaluating the impact of a biodiversity conservation intervention, a counterfactual is typically needed. Counterfactuals are possible alternative system trajectories in the absence of an intervention. Comparing observed outcomes against the chosen counterfactual allows the impact (change attributable to the intervention) to be determined. Because counterfactuals by definition never occur, they must be estimated. Sometimes, there may be many plausible counterfactuals, including various drivers of biodiversity change and defined on a range of spatial or temporal scales. Here, we posit that, by definition, conservation interventions always take place in social-ecological systems (SES) (i.e., ecological systems integrated with human actors). Evaluating the impact of an intervention in an SES, therefore, means taking into account the counterfactuals assumed by different human actors. Use of different counterfactuals by different actors will give rise to perceived differences in the impacts of interventions, which may lead to disagreement about its success or the effectiveness of the underlying approach. Despite that there are biophysical biodiversity trends, it is often true that no single counterfactual is definitively the right one for conservation assessment, so multiple evaluations of intervention efficacy could be considered justifiable. Therefore, we propose calculating the sum of perceived differences, which captures the range of impact estimates associated with different actors in a given SES. The sum of perceived differences gives some indication of how closely actors in an SES agree on the impacts of an intervention. We applied the concept of perceived differences to a set of global, national, and regional case studies (e.g., global realization of Aichi Target 11 for marine protected areas, effect of biodiversity offsetting on vegetation condition in Australia, and influence of conservation measures on an endangered ungulate in Central Asia). We explored approaches for minimizing the sum, including a combination of negotiation and structured decision making, careful alignment of expectations on scope and measurement, and explicit recognition of any intractable differences between stakeholders.

Highlights

  • The effectiveness of attempts to conserve the biodiversity of ecosystems – and associated contributions towards human wellbeing – has become an increasingly pressing topic over recent decades

  • We posit that, by definition, conservation interventions always take place in social-ecological systems (SES; ecological systems integrated with human actors)

  • Use of different counterfactuals by different actors will give rise to perceived differences in the impacts of interventions, which may lead to disagreement about its success or the effectiveness of the underlying approach

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Summary

Introduction

The effectiveness of attempts to conserve the biodiversity of ecosystems – and associated contributions towards human wellbeing – has become an increasingly pressing topic over recent decades. It is critical to go beyond purely ecological counterfactuals when evaluating the impact of a conservation intervention, and consider interlinked social systems (Alagona et al, 2012; Maron et al, 2018) This adds considerable challenges, as different actors may subjectively assume different counterfactuals are most relevant when judging impact (e.g. whether to use a counterfactual at the spatial scale of the project or the landscape; Bull et al, 2014), due to factors such as unconscious biases (Tversky & Kahneman, 1974), temporal starting point (Pauly, 1995), or assumptions made about processes driving change. 126 consider the general case of three or more actors within the hypothetical SES, who all evaluate the impact of an intervention, but at least some specify different counterfactuals This resultant set of counterfactuals is the aforementioned family of counterfactuals. Pearson (2016) suggests actors construct their personal reference frames for conservation based partly upon the spatial scale in question: setting the scale could itself be a means for influencing personal reference frames

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