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- Title
Using mathematical optimization models to design nature reserves.
- Authors
Williams, Justin C.; ReVelle, Charles S.; Levin, Simon A.
- Abstract
Designing an optimal nature reserve for the protection of biological diversity has been a long-standing challenge in conservation biology. A fundamental question has always been, which areas of land should be set aside. During the past two decades, quantitative methods from the field of operations research have been applied to the problem of selecting reserve sites. Here, we trace the development of decision models for systematic reserve design, from the iterative methods developed in the 1980s to the sophisticated spatial models being formulated today. Collaborations among ecologists, conservation biologists, and operations researchers have been key to the progress made thus far. We expect that mathematical reserve design models will become more widely used, in response to a growing need to identify effective alternatives for complex conservation problems worldwide. INSET: Panel 1. An integer program formulation for the minimum....
- Subjects
MATHEMATICAL optimization; NATURE reserves; BIODIVERSITY; ECOLOGISTS; CONSERVATION biology; QUANTITATIVE research
- Publication
Frontiers in Ecology & the Environment, 2004, Vol 2, Issue 2, p98
- ISSN
1540-9295
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1890/1540-9295(2004)002[0098:UMOMTD]2.0.CO;2