“…There is a frequent desire for applying thresholds to model outputs, for example, by calculating P ‐values to estimate significance or transforming probabilities of occurrence into binary categories (predicted presence or absence). Thresholds can sometimes be arbitrary and misleading when they are used in the context of conservation management, and it always is important to explain and justify their use (Bestelmeyer, ; Field, Tyre, Jonzén, Rhodes, & Possingham, ; Liu, Berry, Dawson, & Pearson, ; Wasserstein & Lazar, )The development of optimal thresholds to discontinue surveillance or the removal of invasive species, by estimating the costs and benefits associated with deploying different surveying efforts, is a good example of a well‐designed and justifiable threshold in the context of conservation management (Gormley, Anderson, & Nugent, ; Regan, McCarthy, Baxter, Panetta, & Possingham, ; Rout, Kirkwood, Sutherland, Murphy, & McCarthy, ). Ecological tipping points, system thresholds that once exceeded can irreversibly shift the dynamics of the system, are important in conservation management (Groffman et al, ; Guntenspergen, ).…”