Abstract

AbstractThe purpose of this study is to understand how solutions from single‐ and multiobjective optimization for the conservation of multiple species are different and what impacts these differences. We identify optimal conservation investment allocations maximizing expected species' habitat ranges for multiple pairs of species using two approaches in the central and southern Appalachian region. We find that disparities between the two approaches are affected by differences in the involved species' expected habitat ranges (i.e., contrasting and similar) and their correlation pattern (i.e., positive, negative, and insignificant). Using a single metric by aggregating species' habitats for multiple species to carry out single‐objective optimization is shown to favor the species with a larger habitat distribution more if the involved species' expected habitat distributions are negatively correlated and their distribution difference is larger. Framing multiple metrics of species' habitats separately using multiobjective optimization for the same set of multiple species, in contrast, does not show such a drastic disparity.

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