Enhancing Statistical Methods for Wildlife Protection

University of Barcelona

In human populations, it is relatively easy to calculate demographic trends and make projections of the future if data on basic processes such as births and immigration is known. The data, given by individuals, can be also death and emigration, which subtract. In the wild, on the other hand, understanding the processes that determine wildlife demographic patterns is a highly complex challenge for the scientific community. Although a wide range of methods are now available to estimate births and deaths in wildlife, quantifying emigration and immigration has historically been difficult or impossible in many populations of interest, particularly in the case of threatened species.

A paper published in the journal Biological Conservation warns that missing data on emigration and immigration movements in wildlife can lead to significant biases in species' demographic projections. As a result, projections about the short-, medium- and long-term future of study populations may be inadequate. This puts their survival at risk due to the implementation of erroneous or ineffective conservation strategies. The authors of the new study are Joan Real, Jaume A. Badia-Boher and Antonio Hernández-Matías, from the Conservation Biology team of the Faculty of Biology of the University of Barcelona and the Institute for Research on Biodiversity (IRBio).

More reliable population predictions

This new study on population biology is based on data collected from 2008 to 2020 on the population of the Bonelli's eagle (Aquila fasciata), a threatened species that can be found in Catalonia in the coastal and pre-coastal mountain ranges, from the Empordà to Terres de L'Ebre. In the study, the team emphasises the precision of the population viability analysis (PVA) methodology to improve the management and conservation of long-lived species in the natural environment.

"Population viability analyses are a set of methods that allow us to project the demography of a species into the future, mainly to quantify the probability of extinction of a given species or population of interest", says Joan Real, professor at the Department of Evolutionary Biology, Ecology and Environmental Sciences and head of the Conservation Biology team.

"To date - he continues - these projections have mostly been carried out only with data on births and deaths, so that migration processes were ignored because of the difficulty of obtaining these data. In other words, we are trying to make demographic projections without considering two key demographic processes".

Threats affecting more and more species

In the study of wildlife, population models that do not incorporate immigration or emigration "have a considerable probability of leading to biased projections of future population trends. However, explicitly considering migratory processes allows us to consider all the key demographic processes that determine the future trend of a population", says expert Jaume A. Badia-Boher, first author of the study. "This allows us to be much more precise when making demographic predictions, and therefore also when planning future conservation strategies", he adds.

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