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Journal ArticleDOI

VORTEX: a computer simulation model for population viability analysis

Robert C. Lacy
- 01 Jan 1993 - 
- Vol. 20, Iss: 1, pp 45-65
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TLDR
PVA by simulation modelling is an important tool for identifying populations at risk of extinction, determining the urgency of action, and evaluating options for management, providing opportunity for more complete analysis than is possible by other techniques.
Abstract
Population Viability Analysis (PVA) is the estimation of extinction probabilities by analyses that incorporate identifiable threats to population survival into models of the extinction process. Extrinsic forces, such as habitat loss, over-harvesting, and competition or predation by introduced species, often lead to population decline. Although the traditional methods of wildlife ecology can reveal such deterministic trends, random fluctuations that increase as populations become smaller can lead to extinction even of populations that have, on average, positive population growth when below carrying capacity. Computer simulation modelling provides a tool for exploring the viability of populations subjected to many complex, interacting deterministic and random processes. One such simulation model, VORTEX, has been used extensively by the Captive Breeding Specialist Group (Species Survival Commission, IUCN), by wildlife agencies, and by university classes. The algorithms, structure, assumptions and applications of VORTEX are described in this paper. VORTEX models population processes as discrete, sequential events, with probabilistic outcomes. VORTEX simulates birth and death processes and the transmission of genes through the generations by generating random numbers to determine whether each animal lives or dies, to determine the number of progeny produced by each female each year, and to determine which of the two alleles at a genetic locus are transmitted from each parent to each offspring. Fecundity is assumed to be independent of age after an animal reaches reproductive age. Mortality rates are specified for each pre-reproductive age-sex class and for reproductive-age animals. Inbreeding depression is modelled as a decrease in viability in inbred animals. The user has the option of modelling density dependence in reproductive rates. As a simple model of density dependence in survival, a carrying capacity is imposed by a probabilistic truncation of each age class if the population size exceeds the specified carrying capacity. VORTEX can model linear trends in the carrying capacity. VORTEX models environmental variation by sampling birth rates, death rates, and the carrying capacity from binomial or normal distributions. Catastrophes are modelled as sporadic random events that reduce survival and reproduction for one year. VORTEX also allows the user to supplement or harvest the population, and multiple subpopulations can be tracked, with user-specified migration among the units. VORTEX outputs summary statistics on population growth rates, the probability of population extinction, the time to extinction, and the mean size and genetic variation in extant populations. VORTEX necessarily makes many assumptions. The model it incorporates is most applicable to species with low fecundity and long lifespans, such as mammals, birds and reptiles. It integrates the interacting effects of many of the deterministic and stochastic processes that have an impact on the viability of small populations, providing opportunity for more complete analysis than is possible by other techniques. PVA by simulation modelling is an important tool for identifying populations at risk of extinction, determining the urgency of action, and evaluating options for management.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Use of population viability analysis to identify management priorities and success in reintroducing przewalski's horses to southwestern mongolia

TL;DR: The stochastic population simulation model VORTEX was used to identify key variables and their threshold values in population dynamics, predict extinction risk, and optimize project management and release regime by comparing model parameters with population data.
BookDOI

Beaver protection, management, and utilization in Europe and North America

TL;DR: The distribution, population status, and management of beavers in Europe are discussed in this paper, with a focus on the management of the North American Beaver (Castor canadensis) on the South-Savo Game Management District, Finland.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing the value of follow-up translocations: a case study using New Zealand robins

TL;DR: This paper used population viability analysis to assess the benefit of supplementing a population of New Zealand robins 14 months after reintroduction, at which time the population had 6 females and 22 males.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conservation Genetic Analysis of the Texas State Bison Herd

TL;DR: To aid in the development of a long-term genetic conservation plan for this population, allelic variation at 54 microsatellite loci representing each of the nuclear chromosomes in the bison genome was examined and analyzed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A method for validating stochastic models of population viability : a case study of the mountain pygmy-possum (Burramys parvus)

TL;DR: In this paper, a model of the population dynamics of the mountain pygmy-possum (Burramys parvus Broom 1895), based on annual census data collected from a single population in the Snowy Mountains of New South Wales, Australia between 1986 and 1997, was presented.
References
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Book

Introduction to quantitative genetics

TL;DR: The genetic constitution of a population: Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium and changes in gene frequency: migration mutation, changes of variance, and heritability are studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Introduction to Population Genetics Theory

James F. Crow, +1 more
- 01 Sep 1971 - 
TL;DR: An introduction to population genetics theory, An introduction to Population Genetics Theory, Population Genetics theory, Population genetics theory as discussed by the authors, Population genetics, population genetics, and population genetics theories, Population Genetic Theory
Book

An introduction to population genetics theory

TL;DR: An introduction to population genetics theory, An introduction to Population Genetics theory, and more.