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Synergies between the key biodiversity area and systematic conservation planning approaches

Authors :
Penny F. Langhammer
Leon Bennun
Piero Visconti
Thomas M. Brooks
Nigel Dudley
Fabien Fivaz
Diego Juffe-Bignoli
Robert J. Smith
Mervyn Lötter
Carlos Alberto de Mattos Scaramuzza
Simon Ferrier
James E. M. Watson
Moreno Di Marco
Naamal De Silva
Lucas Joppa
Craig Groves
Jon Paul Rodríguez
Hugh P. Possingham
Andrew T. Knight
Carlo Rondinini
Edward T. Game
John F. Lamoreux
Luigi Boitani
Stephen Woodley
Neil D. Burgess
Lincoln Fishpool
Annabelle Cuttelod
Stuart H. M. Butchart
Jennifer McGowan
Anthony G. Rebelo
Andrew J. Plumptre
Source :
Smith, R J, Bennun, L, Brooks, T M, Butchart, S H M, Cuttelod, A, Di Marco, M, Ferrier, S, Fishpool, L D C, Joppa, L, Juffe-Bignoli, D, Knight, A T, Lamoreux, J F, Langhammer, P, Possingham, H P, Rondinini, C, Visconti, P, Watson, J E M, Woodley, S, Boitani, L, Burgess, N D, De Silva, N, Dudley, N, Fivaz, F, Game, E T, Groves, C, Lötter, M, McGowan, J, Plumptre, A J, Rebelo, A G, Rodriguez, J P & Scaramuzza, C A D M 2019, ' Synergies between the key biodiversity area and systematic conservation planning approaches ', Conservation Letters, vol. 12, no. 1, e12625 . https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12625
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Systematic conservation planning and Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) are the two most widely used approaches for identifying important sites for biodiversity. However, there is limited advice for conservation policy makers and practitioners on when and how they should be combined. Here we provide such guidance, using insights from the recently developed Global Standard for the Identification of KBAs and the language of decision science to review and clarify their similarities and differences. We argue the two approaches are broadly similar, with both setting transparent environmental objectives and specifying actions. There is however greater contrast in the data used and actions involved, as the KBA approach uses biodiversity data alone and identifies sites for monitoring and vigilance actions at a minimum, whereas systematic conservation planning combines biodiversity and implementation-relevant data to guide management actions. This difference means there is much scope for combining approaches, so conservation planners should use KBA data in their analyses, setting context-specific targets for each KBA type, and planners and donors should use systematic conservation planning techniques when prioritizing between KBAs for management action. In doing so, they will benefit conservation policy, practice and research by building on the collaborations formed through the KBA Standard's development.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1755263X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Smith, R J, Bennun, L, Brooks, T M, Butchart, S H M, Cuttelod, A, Di Marco, M, Ferrier, S, Fishpool, L D C, Joppa, L, Juffe-Bignoli, D, Knight, A T, Lamoreux, J F, Langhammer, P, Possingham, H P, Rondinini, C, Visconti, P, Watson, J E M, Woodley, S, Boitani, L, Burgess, N D, De Silva, N, Dudley, N, Fivaz, F, Game, E T, Groves, C, Lötter, M, McGowan, J, Plumptre, A J, Rebelo, A G, Rodriguez, J P & Scaramuzza, C A D M 2019, ' Synergies between the key biodiversity area and systematic conservation planning approaches ', Conservation Letters, vol. 12, no. 1, e12625 . https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12625
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....23d773e90b9134ef999a48b7d41720b9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12625