Asked by hi
Park managers are considering several options: reintroduce wolves, build wildlife crossings, remove invasive species, and create buffer zones around sensitive areas. Which approach would work best for ecosystem management?
Question 8 options:
Choose the single cheapest option available to save money
Implement multiple complementary strategies that address different ecosystem aspects together
Focus only on the most visible problems that visitors notice
Wait to see if environmental problems resolve themselves naturally
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Implement multiple complementary strategies that address different ecosystem aspects together.
Rationale: ecosystems are complex and problems are interconnected — reintroducing predators, improving connectivity with crossings, removing invasives, and creating buffer zones each target different drivers (trophic structure, movement, species composition, habitat protection). Using several coordinated actions increases resilience, reduces the chance a single measure fails, and is more effective long-term. Pair this with monitoring and adaptive management to adjust actions as outcomes are observed.
Rationale: ecosystems are complex and problems are interconnected — reintroducing predators, improving connectivity with crossings, removing invasives, and creating buffer zones each target different drivers (trophic structure, movement, species composition, habitat protection). Using several coordinated actions increases resilience, reduces the chance a single measure fails, and is more effective long-term. Pair this with monitoring and adaptive management to adjust actions as outcomes are observed.
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