全部 标题 作者
关键词 摘要

OALib Journal期刊
ISSN: 2333-9721
费用:99美元

查看量下载量

相关文章

更多...
PLOS ONE  2008 

Avoiding Costly Conservation Mistakes: The Importance of Defining Actions and Costs in Spatial Priority Setting

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0002586

Full-Text   Cite this paper   Add to My Lib

Abstract:

Background The typical mandate in conservation planning is to identify areas that represent biodiversity targets within the smallest possible area of land or sea, despite the fact that area may be a poor surrogate for the cost of many conservation actions. It is also common for priorities for conservation investment to be identified without regard to the particular conservation action that will be implemented. This demonstrates inadequate problem specification and may lead to inefficiency: the cost of alternative conservation actions can differ throughout a landscape, and may result in dissimilar conservation priorities. Methodology/Principal Findings We investigate the importance of formulating conservation planning problems with objectives and cost data that relate to specific conservation actions. We identify priority areas in Australia for two alternative conservation actions: land acquisition and stewardship. Our analyses show that using the cost surrogate that most closely reflects the planned conservation action can cut the cost of achieving our biodiversity goals by half. We highlight spatial differences in relative priorities for land acquisition and stewardship in Australia, and provide a simple approach for determining which action should be undertaken where. Conclusions/Significance Our study shows that a poorly posed conservation problem that fails to pre-specify the planned conservation action and incorporate cost a priori can lead to expensive mistakes. We can be more efficient in achieving conservation goals by clearly specifying our conservation objective and parameterising the problem with economic data that reflects this objective.

References

[1]  Pimm SL, Ayres M, Balmford A, Branch G, Brandon K, et al. (2001) Can We Defy Nature's End? Science 293(5538): 2207–2208.
[2]  Kareiva P, Marvier M (2003) Conserving biodiversity coldspots. American Scientist 91: 344–351.
[3]  Brooks TM, Mittermeier MA, d. Fonseca GAB, Gerlach J, Hoffmann M, et al. (2006) Global Biodiversity Conservation Priorities. Science 313: 58–61.
[4]  Ceballos G, Ehrlich PR (2006) Global mammal distributions, biodiversity hotspots, and conservation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 103: 19374–19379.
[5]  Church R, ReVelle C (1974) The maximal coverage location problem. Papers of the Regional Science Association 32: 101–118.
[6]  Margules CR, Pressey RL (2000) Systematic conservation planning. Nature 405: 243–253.
[7]  Possingham HP, Ball I, Andelman S (2000) Mathematical methods for identifying representative reserve networks. In: Ferson S, Burgman M, editors. Quantitative Methods for Conservation Biology. Springer-Verlag. pp. 291–305.
[8]  Pressey RL (2002) The first reserve selection algorithm - a retrospective on Jamie Kirkpatrick's 1983 paper. Progress in Physical Geography 26: 434–441.
[9]  Groom MJ, Meffe GK, Carroll CR, editors. (2006) Principles of Conservation Biology. Sundaland, MA: Sinauer Associates Inc..
[10]  Possingham HP, Wilson KA, Andelman SJ, Vynne CH (2006) Protected areas: goals, limitations, and design. In: Groom MJ, Meffe GK, Carroll CR, editors. Principles of Conservation Biology. Sundaland, MA: Sinauer Associates Inc.. pp. 509–533.
[11]  Rissman AR, Lozier L, Comendant T, Kareiva P, Kiesecker JM, et al. (2007) Conservation easements: Biodiversity protection and private use. Conservation Biology 21(3): 709–718.
[12]  Wilson KA, Underwood EC, Morrison SA, Klausmeyer KR, Murdoch WW, et al. (2007) Conserving Biodiversity Efficiently: What to do, where and when. PLoS Biology 5: e223.
[13]  Naidoo R, Balmford A, Ferraro PJ, Polasky S, Ricketts TH, et al. (2006) Integrating economic costs into conservation planning. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 21(12): 681–687.
[14]  Ando A, Camm J, Polasky S, Solow A (1998) Species distributions, land values and efficient conservation. Science 279: 2126–2128.
[15]  Polasky S, Camm JD, Garber-Yonts B (2001) Selecting biological reserves cost effectively: an application to terrestrial vertebrate conservation in Oregon. Land Economics 77(1): 68–78.
[16]  Stewart RR, Possingham HP (2005) Efficiency, costs and trade-offs in marine reserve system design. Environmental Modeling and Assessment 10: 203–213.
[17]  Richardson EA, Kaiser MJ, Edwards-Jones G, Possingham HP (2006) Sensitivity of marine-reserve design to the spatial resolution of socioeconomic data. Conservation Biology 20: 1191–1202.
[18]  Klein C, Chan A, Kircher L, Cundiff A, Hrovat Y, et al. (2008) Striking a balance between biodiversity conservation and socioeconomic viability in the design of marine protected areas. Conservation Biology. DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2008.00896.x.
[19]  Balmford A, Gaston KJ, Blyth S, James A, Kapos V (2003) Global variation in terrestrial conservation costs, conservation benefits, and unmet conservation needs. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 100: 1046–1050.
[20]  Moore J, Balmford A, Allnutt T, Burgess N (2004) Integrating costs into conservation planning across Africa. Biological Conservation 117: 343–350.
[21]  Underwood EC, Shaw MR, Wilson KA, Kareiva P, Klausmeyer KR, et al. (2008) Protecting Biodiversity when Money Matters: Maximizing Return on Investment. PLoS ONE 3(1): e1515. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0001515.
[22]  Martin TG, Chadès I, Arcese P, Marra PP, Possingham HP, et al. (2007) Optimal Conservation of Migratory Species. PLoS ONE 2(8): e751. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0000751.
[23]  Myers N (1988) Threatened biotas: ‘hot spots’ in tropical forests. Environmentalist 8: 187–208.
[24]  Araujo MB, Williams PH, Fuller R (2002) Dynamics of extinction and the selection of nature reserves. Proc R Soc B 269, 1971–1980.
[25]  Cowling RM, Pressey RL, Rouget M, Lombard AT (2003) A conservation plan for a global biodiversity hotspot – the Cape Floristic Region, South Africa. Biological Conservation 112: 191–216.
[26]  Frazee SR, Cowling RM, Pressey RL, Turpie JK, Lindenberg N (2003) Estimating the costs of conserving a biodiversity hotspot: a case-study of the Cape Floristic Region, South Africa. Biological Conservation 112: 275–290.
[27]  Naidoo R, Adamowicz WL (2006) Modeling opportunity costs of conservation in transitional landscapes. Conservation Biology 20: 490–500.
[28]  Chomitz KM, Alger K, Thomas TS, Orlando H, Vila Nova P (2005) Opportunity costs of conservation in a biodiversity hotspot: the case of southern Bahia. Environment and Development Economics 10: 293–312.
[29]  Possingham HP, Nicholson E (2007) Principles of Landscape Design that Emerge from a Formal Problem-Solving Approach. In: Hobbs RJ, Lindenmayer DB, editors. Managing and designing landscapes for conservation: moving from perspectives to principles. Blackwell. in press.
[30]  Hajkowicz SA, Perraud JM, Dawes W, DeRose R (2005) The strategic landscape investment model: a tool for mapping optimal environmental expenditure. Environmental Modelling and Software 20(10): 1251–1262.
[31]  Jacobi SK, ReVelle CS, Pressey RL, Williams JC (2007) Novel operations research methods for efficiently determining irreplaceable sites for conservation. Environmental Modelling and Assessment 12: 91–103.
[32]  Carwardine J, Rochester WA, Richardson KS, Williams KJ, Pressey RL, et al. (2007) Conservation planning with irreplaceability: does the method matter? Biodiversity and Conservation 16: 245–258.
[33]  Pressey RL, Cowling RM (2001) Reserve selection algorithms and the real world. Conservation Biology 15(1): 275–277.
[34]  Wilson KA, Pressey RL, Newton AN, Burgman MA, Possingham HP, et al. (2005) Measuring and incorporating vulnerability into conservation planning. Environmental Management 35(5): 527–543.
[35]  Reyers B (2004) Incorporating anthropogenic threats into evaluations of regional biodiversity and prioritisation of conservation areas in the Limpopo Province, South Africa. Biological Conservation 118(4): 521–531.
[36]  Armsworth PR, Daily GC, Kareiva P, Sanchirico JN (2006) Land market feedbacks can undermine biodiversity conservation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 103: 5403–5408.
[37]  Possingham HP, Wilson KA (2005) Biodiversity - Turning up the heat on hotspots. Nature 436: 919–920.
[38]  Ferraro PJ, Pattanayak S (2006) Money for nothing? A call for empirical evaluation of biodiversity conservation investments. PLoS Biology 4:
[39]  Halpern BS, Pyke CR, Fox HE, Haney JC, Schlaepfer MA, et al. (2006) Gaps and mismatches between global conservation priorities and spending. Conservation Biology 20: 56–65.
[40]  Odling-Smee L (2005) Conservation: Dollars and sense. Nature 437: 614–616.
[41]  Ferrier S, Pressey RL, Barrett TW (2000) A new predictor of the irreplaceability of areas for achieving a conservation goal, its application to real-world planning, and a research agenda for further refinement. Biological Conservation 93: 303–325.
[42]  National Vegetation Information System (NVIS) stage 1 (version 3.1) (2001) Executive Steering Committee for Australian Vegetation Information.
[43]  Integrated Vegetation Cover (Version 1) (2003) Commonwealth of Australia, Bureau of Rural Sciences.
[44]  Department of Environment and Water Resources (2005) Australia's Biogeographical Regions. Available online at www.deh.gov.au/parks/nrs/ibra/.
[45]  Mackey BG, Berry S, Brown T (2008) Reconciling approaches to biogeographic regionalization: a systematic and generic framework examined with a case study of the Australian continent. Journal of Biogeography 35(2): 213–229.
[46]  Birds Australia (2005) Atlas of Australian Birds. Available online at www.birdsaustralia.com.au/atlas/.
[47]  Burgman MA, Fox JC (2003) Bias in species range estimates from minimum convex polygons: implications for conservation and options for improved planning. Animal Conservation 6: 19–28.
[48]  Rondinini C, Wilson KA, Grantham H, Boitani L, Possingham HP (2006) Tradeoffs of different types of species occurrence data for use in systematic conservation planning. Ecology Letters 9: 1136–1145.
[49]  Department of Environment and Water Resources (1999) Dataset of Species of National Environmental Significance. Available online at http://asdd.ga.gov.au.
[50]  Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics (2000) Land Values on Broadacre Farms, 1992–93 to 1996–97.
[51]  Davis FW, Costello C, Stoms D (2006) Efficient conservation in a utility-maximization framework. Ecology and Society 11(1): 33.
[52]  Hajkowicz SA, Young MD, editors. (2002) Value of returns and costs of resource degradation. Canberra: Consulting Report to the National Land and Water Resources Audit, CSIRO Land and Water Division.
[53]  Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics (2006) Cost Price Index multipliers. www.abareconomics.com/interactive/agsurf?/about_data/financial_data.htm.
[54]  Pressey RL, Taffs KH (2001) Scheduling conservation action in production landscapes: priority areas in western New South Wales defined by irreplaceability and vulnerability to vegetation loss. Biological Conservation 100: 355–376.
[55]  Das A, Krishnaswamy J, Bawa KS, Kiran MC, Srinivas V, et al. (2006) Prioritisation of conservation areas in the Western Ghats, India. Biological Conservation 133(1): 16–31.

Full-Text

Contact Us

service@oalib.com

QQ:3279437679

WhatsApp +8615387084133