Too Soon to Save: structural uncertainty inverts the value of precautionary conservation action

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Abstract

Conservation policy commonly assumes that acting early is inherently safer than waiting. Here, we show that this intuition can fail when ecological structure is uncertain and protection decisions are difficult to reverse. We compare a precautionary strategy that protects early under uncertainty with an adaptive strategy that learns before committing protection, across both synthetic and real ecosystems.

In synthetic ecosystems with uncertain trophic structure, the adaptive learn-then-commit strategy yields higher protected-area phylogenetic diversity than the main precautionary baseline (Rao’s Q PD = 5.23 versus 4.41, P < 10 −4 , Cohen’s d = 0.54) and higher functional diversity (1.39 versus 1.25, P < 10 −4 , d = 0.93), although it remains below the full-knowledge oracle (5.34 and 1.43, respectively). This adaptive advantage is greatest when errors in structural allocation are most costly, particularly in highly connected ecosystems. It is also stronger in highly modular systems, although this effect is secondary.

In a real ecosystem (North-East Atlantic fish communities), we find the same conditions for such an advantage: structural importance is largely decoupled from abundance ( ρ = −0.05, P = 0.77), and trophic uncertainty declines markedly through time ( R 2 = 0.95, P < 10 −6 ). Consistent with this mechanism, adaptive spatial allocation also outperforms a precautionary Marxan-like baseline in the empirical analysis (Shannon diversity 1.70 versus 1.44 at K = 10, P < 10 −5 ).

Together, these results show that the value of waiting in conservation does not arise from delay itself, but from the opportunity to learn which components of an ecosystem matter most. When ecological structure is uncertain and protection is hard to reverse, precaution can lock conservation into avoidable mistakes.

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