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Dryad
Drolet, David; Locke, Andrea; Lewis, Mark A.; Davidson, Jeff 2015-08-07 The main objective of evidence-based management is to promote use of scientific data in the decision-making process of managers, with data either complementing or replacing expert knowledge. It is expected that this will increase the efficiency of environmental interventions. However, the relative accuracy and precision of evidence-based tools and expert knowledge has seldom been evaluated. It is therefore essential to verify whether such tools provide better decision support before advocating their use. We conducted an elicitation survey in which experts were asked to (1) evaluate the influence of various factors on the success of eradication programs for aquatic nonindigenous species and (2) provide probabilities of success for real case studies for which we knew the outcome. The responses of experts were compared with the results and predictions of a newly developed evidence-based tool: a statistical model calibrated with a meta-analysis of case studies designed to evaluate probability of eradication. Experts and the model generally identified the same factors as influencing the probability of success. However, the model provided much more accurate estimates for the probability of eradication than expert opinion, strongly suggesting that an evidence-based approach is superior to expert knowledge in this case. Uncertainty surrounding the predictions of the evidence-based tool was similar to among-expert variability. Finally, a model based on ≥30 case studies returned more accurate predictions than expert opinion. We conclude that decision-making processes based on expert judgment would greatly benefit from incorporating evidence-based tools.
University of Victoria Dataverse Logo
Borealis
Carrier-Belleau, Charlotte; Drolet, David; McKindsey, Christopher W.; Archambault, Philippe 2021-03-16 This dataset includes the data collected from a laboratory experiment between August 1 and October 23, 2018 to investigate the individual and combined effect of freshwater input, increased temperature and nutrient enrichment after two-exposure time on <i>Mytilus</i> sp, <i>Limecola balthica</i> and microphytobenthos biomass.
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Zenodo
Uboldi, Thomas; Byrro - Gauthier, Nathalia; Bridier, Guillaume; Jézéquel, Youenn; Drolet, David; Pettré, Julien; Tremblay, Rejean; Olivier, Fréderic; Chauvaud, Laurent 2025-01-07 Among acoustic pollutants, commercial shipping is creating one of the most pervasive underwater man-made noises, doubling in intensity worldwide every decade. Besides marine mammals and fishes, there is now evidence that anthropophony also negatively affect several classes of marine invertebrates. Since laboratory experiments only provide partial answers to the effects of noise on animal ecology, we investigated the influence of shipping noise on the gastropod whelk Buccinum undatum at different spatiotemporal scales. In a sub Arctic Bay, we exposed two distinct acoustic telemetry arrays to contrasting shipping noise intensities, with root-mean-square sound pressure levels (SPLrms) of 99.87 and 124.01 dB re 1 µPa over a 10-days period to evaluate the effect of noise on mobility, habitat usage and distribution of wild specimens. We then exposed individuals to shipping noise at different SPLrms (control/114.62 up to 174.73 dB re 1 µPa) in a large tank over 2 h period to assess finer behavioural changes through accelerometry. Over the long term, acoustic telemetry revealed that individuals exposed to shipping noise had significantly reduced speed of displacement and 21.1% lower daily covered distances. Whelks also exhibited 36.6% smaller habitat usage potential, although they did not display any area avoidance from the polluted site. In laboratory, individuals exposed to the loudest shipping noise were less active than other treatments, with significantly lower overall dynamic body acceleration and shorter moving time. These results demonstrate that over different intensity and time scales, shipping noise negatively affects the locomotor capacity of gastropods, constraining their potential for dispersal with major ecological consequences for local populations. Taking advantage of the remoteness of the study area, we also took the opportunity to shed light on the ecological impact of shipping noise on invertebrate populations poorly adapted to noise in pristine habitats. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode

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