Implementing efficient conservation portfolio design |
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Affiliation: | 1. Université de Toulouse; INSA, UPS, INP; LISBP, 135 Avenue de Rangueil, F-31077 Toulouse, France;2. INRA, UMR792 Ingénierie des Systèmes Biologiques et des Procédés, F-31400 Toulouse, France;3. CNRS, UMR5504, F-31400 Toulouse, France;4. Laboratory of Food Chemistry and Biochemistry, KU Leuven, Kasteelpark Arenberg 20 bus 2463, B-3001 Leuven, Belgium;5. Department of Food and Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry, University of Helsinki, P.O. Box 27, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland |
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Abstract: | ![]() Modern tools for cost-effective conservation reserve site planning require the planner to have information about spatial distributions of conservation costs and benefits. Climate change creates unprecedented uncertainty about future land values and species habitat ranges, such that conservation scientists cannot map costs and benefits with certainty anymore. This paper contributes to the literature on the economics of conservation in the face of climate change uncertainty. It advances a new method for using modern portfolio theory to choose lands to protect that yield total conservation returns with less uncertainty. It explores the implications for portfolio recommendations of variation in the correlations between ecological and land-value responses to climate change. It also tests the robustness of the method to shortcuts that might be taken to simplify analysis, identifying problems that arise if conservation costs are ignored in portfolio analysis and demonstrating when portfolio recommendations are sensitive to how ecological benefits are quantified. |
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Keywords: | Conservation Reserve-site selection Climate change Uncertainty Portfolio Risk Spatial Prairie Pothole Region |
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