Trade-offs between data resolution, accuracy, and cost when choosing information to plan reserves for coral reef ecosystems

Date

2017

Authors

Tulloch, Vivitskaia J.
Klein, Carissa
Jupiter, Stacy D.
Tulloch, Ayesha
Roelfsema, Chris
Possingham, Hugh P

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Academic Press

Abstract

Conservation planners must reconcile trade-offs associated with using biodiversity data of differing qualities to make decisions. Coarse habitat classifications are commonly used as surrogates to design marine reserve networks when fine-scale biodiversity data are incomplete or unavailable. Although finely-classified habitat maps provide more detail, they may have more misclassification errors, a common problem when remotely-sensed imagery is used. Despite these issues, planners rarely consider the effects of errors when choosing data for spatially explicit conservation prioritizations. Here we evaluate trade-offs between accuracy and resolution of hierarchical coral reef habitat data (geomorphology and benthic substrate) derived from remote sensing, in spatial planning for Kubulau District, Fiji. For both, we use accuracy information describing the probability that a mapped habitat classification is correct to design marine reserve networks that achieve habitat conservation targets, and demonstrate inadequacies of using habitat maps without accuracy data. We show that using more detailed habitat information ensures better representation of biogenic habitats (i.e. coral and seagrass), but leads to larger and more costly reserves, because these data have more misclassification errors, and are also more expensive to obtain. Reduced impacts on fishers are possible using coarsely-classified data, which are also more cost-effective for planning reserves if we account for data collection costs, but using these data may under-represent reef habitats that are important for fisheries and biodiversity, due to the maps low thematic resolution. Finally, we show that explicitly accounting for accuracy information in decisions maximizes the chance of successful conservation outcomes by reducing the risk of missing conservation representation targets, particularly when using finely classified data

Description

Keywords

Marine protected area, Conservation, Spatial planning, Cost-effectiveness, Surrogate, Habitat classification

Citation

Source

Journal of Environmental Management

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31