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Improving spatial prioritisation for remote marine regions: optimising biodiversity conservation and sustainable development trade-offs

Authors :
Thor Saunders
Rebecca Fisher
Hugh P. Possingham
Oliver Berry
Euan S. Harvey
Andrew Heyward
Cordelia H. Moore
Ryan J. Lowe
Clay Bryce
Alexis Espinosa-Gayosso
Errol Sporer
Matthew E. Watts
Ben Radford
Romola R. Stewart
Stephen J. Newman
Jim Prescott
Source :
Scientific Reports
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2016.

Abstract

Creating large conservation zones in remote areas, with less intense stakeholder overlap and limited environmental information, requires periodic review to ensure zonation mitigates primary threats and fill gaps in representation, while achieving conservation targets. Follow-up reviews can utilise improved methods and data, potentially identifying new planning options yielding a desirable balance between stakeholder interests. This research explored a marine zoning system in north-west Australia–a biodiverse area with poorly documented biota. Although remote, it is economically significant (i.e. petroleum extraction and fishing). Stakeholder engagement was used to source the best available biodiversity and socio-economic data and advanced spatial analyses produced 765 high resolution data layers, including 674 species distributions representing 119 families. Gap analysis revealed the current proposed zoning system as inadequate, with 98.2% of species below the Convention on Biological Diversity 10% representation targets. A systematic conservation planning algorithm Maxan provided zoning options to meet representation targets while balancing this with industry interests. Resulting scenarios revealed that conservation targets could be met with minimal impacts on petroleum and fishing industries, with estimated losses of 4.9% and 7.2% respectively. The approach addressed important knowledge gaps and provided a powerful and transparent method to reconcile industry interests with marine conservation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d88706d0b23895655dade96991250638