“…Being explicit when using thresholds is crucial to providing transparent applications of model results. The situation is slightly different when the model is part of an adaptive conservation management program (Addison et al, 2013;Conroy & Peterson, 2013;Dietze et al, 2018;Salafsky et al, 2016;Schmolke et al, 2010). 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, 2006;Field, Tyre, Jonzén, Rhodes, & Possingham, 2004;Liu, Berry, Dawson, & Pearson, 2005;Wasserstein & Lazar, 2016) 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 welldesigned and justifiable threshold in the context of conservation management (Gormley,Anderson,& Nugent,FIGURE 3 Two histograms illustrating recommendation 7 ("communicating the uncertainty in model results to end-users broadens its utility").…”