Authors
J Michael Reed, L Scott Mills, John B Dunning Jr, Eric S Menges, Kevin S McKelvey, Robert Frye, Steven R Beissinger, Marie‐Charlotte Anstett, Philip Miller
Publication date
2002/2
Source
Conservation biology
Volume
16
Issue
1
Pages
7-19
Publisher
Blackwell Science, Inc.
Description
Population viability analysis ( PVA) has become a commonly used tool in endangered species management. There is no single process that constitutes PVA, but all approaches have in common an assessment of a population's risk of extinction (or quasi extinction) or its projected population growth either under current conditions or expected from proposed management. As model sophistication increases, and software programs that facilitate PVA without the need for modeling expertise become more available, there is greater potential for the misuse of models and increased confusion over interpreting their results. Consequently, we discuss the practical use and limitations of PVA in conservation planning, and we discuss some emerging issues of PVA. We review extant issues that have become prominent in PVA, including spatially explicit modeling, sensitivity analysis, incorporating genetics into PVA, PVA in …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JM Reed, LS Mills, JB Dunning Jr, ES Menges… - Conservation biology, 2002