Population Viability Analysis (PVA) is a species-specific method of risk assessment frequently used in conservation biology. It is traditionally defined as the process that determines the likelihood that a population will go extinct within a given number of years. More recently, PVA has been described as a marriage of ecology and statistics that brings together species characteristics and environmental variability to forecast population health and extinction risk. Each PVA is individually developed for a target population or species, and consequently, each PVA is unique.
PVA gained popularity in the United States as federal agencies and ecologists required methods to evaluate the risk of extinction and possible outcomes of management decisions, particularly in accordance with the Endangered Species Act of 1966, and the National Forest Management Act of 1976.
In 1986, Gilpin and Soulé broadened the PVA definition to include the interactive forces that affect the viability of a population, including genetics. The use of PVA increased dramatically in the late 1980s and early 1990s following advances in personal computers and software packages.
Model selection is critical: an overly complicated model can reduce precision, while an overly simple model is not likely to be accurate. Before settling on a particular PVA model, it is best to examine a few potential models to gain understanding of the effects of different model structures on results.
For example, a sensitivity analysis for loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) found that survivorship through the egg stage had little effect on population outcomes, while survivorship through the oceanic juvenile stage was critical to population health. Recovery efforts, which had been focused on egg survival on nesting-beaches, were redirected towards increasing juvenile survivorship by incorporating turtle-excluder devices (TEDs) into fishing nets.
Following a recent outbreak of canine distemper virus, a PVA was performed for the critically endangered island fox (Urocyon littoralis) of Santa Catalina Island, California. The Santa Catalina island fox population is uniquely composed of two subpopulations that are separated by an isthmus, with the eastern subpopulation at greater risk of extinction than the western subpopulation. PVA was conducted with the goals of 1) evaluating the island fox’s extinction risk, 2) estimating the island fox’s sensitivity to catastrophic events, and 3) evaluating recent recovery efforts which include release of captive-bred foxes and transport of wild juvenile foxes from the west to the east side. Results of the PVA concluded that the island fox is still at significant risk of extinction, and is highly susceptible to catastrophes that occur more than once every 20 years. Furthermore, extinction risks and future population sizes on both sides of the island were significantly dependent on the number of foxes released and transported each year.
An enormous amount of data is required for PVA— it is estimated that for a precise extinction probability assessment of t years, 5t -10t years of data are required. Datasets of such magnitude are typically unavailable for rare species; it has been estimated that suitable data for PVA is available for only 2% of threatened bird species. PVA for threatened and endangered species is particularly a problem as the predictive power of PVA plummets dramatically with minimal datasets. Ellner et al. (2002) argued that PVA has little value in such circumstances and is best replaced by other methods. Others argue that PVA remains the best tool available for estimations of extinction risk.
Even with an adequate dataset, it is possible that a PVA can still have large errors in extinction rate predictions. PVA is a scientific best guess of what will happen in the future, based on past and current conditions. It is impossible to incorporate all future possibilities into a PVA: habitats may change, catastrophes may occur, new diseases may be introduced. PVA is a model—an oversimplified representation of the world—and no model is 100% correct. For this reason, several argue that PVA is always best used in a relative sense, such as comparing proposed management plans against each other or comparing management proposals with current conditions.
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