Abstract

Western Snowy Plovers (Charadrius nivosus nivosus) are federally listed under the US Endangered Species Act as Threatened. They occur along the US Pacific coastline and are threatened by habitat loss and destruction and excessive levels of predation and human disturbance. Populations have been monitored since the 1970s for distribution, reproduction, and survival. Since the species was federally listed in 1993 and a recovery plan was approved under the US Fish and Wildlife Service in 2007, recovery actions have resulted in growing populations with increased presence at breeding and wintering sites throughout their Pacific Coast range. This success has created logistical challenges related to monitoring a recovering species and a need for identifying and instituting the best monitoring approach given recovery goals, budgets, and the likelihood of monitoring success. We devised and implemented a structured decision analysis to evaluate nine alternative monitoring strategies. The analysis included inviting plover biologists involved in monitoring to score each strategy according to a suite of performance measures. Using multi-attribute utility theory, we combined scores across the performance measures for each monitoring strategy, and applied weighted utility values to show the implications of tradeoffs and find optimal decisions. We evaluated four scenarios for weighting the monitoring objectives and how risk attitude affects optimal decisions. This resulted in identifying six strategies that best meet recovery needs and were Pareto optimal for cost-effective monitoring. Results were presented to the US Fish and Wildlife Service, responsible for monitoring as well as for consideration to ensure consistent monitoring methods across the species’ range. Our use of structured decision-making can be applied to cases of other species once imperiled but now on the road to recovery.

Highlights

  • Western Snowy Plovers (Charadrius nivosus nivosus, WSPs) occur along the Pacific coastline of North America, and are year-round residents throughout most of this range.Populations of this subspecies of snowy plover are vulnerable to habitat loss and destruction, which can exacerbate levels of predation and human disturbance, especially during the breeding season

  • The recovery plan for the WSP Pacific coast population [2] incorporated three specific criteria that, when met, would signal that the species would be ready for consideration of removal from the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) list of threatened species: Criterion 1

  • We followed the PrOACT approach for structured decision making [4,15], which involves a sequence of five steps: Framing the decision problem, articulating objectives, identifying action alternatives, predicting the consequences of those alternatives in terms of the stated objectives, and evaluating tradeoffs among competing objectives

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Summary

Introduction

Western Snowy Plovers (Charadrius nivosus nivosus, WSPs) occur along the Pacific coastline of North America, and are year-round residents throughout most of this range. Populations of this subspecies of snowy plover are vulnerable to habitat loss and destruction, which can exacerbate levels of predation and human disturbance, especially during the breeding season. The recovery plan for the WSP Pacific coast population [2] incorporated three specific criteria that, when met, would signal that the species would be ready for consideration of removal from the USFWS list of threatened species ( see Supplementary Materials 1 for further details): Criterion 1. Monitoring shows that an average of 3000 breeding adults distributed among six recovery units have been maintained for a minimum of 10 years

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