Title
Quantifying the relative irreplaceability of important bird and biodiversity areas
Author(s)
Di Marco, M.;Brooks, T.;Cuttelod, A.;Fishpool, L.D.C.;Rondinini, C.;Smith, R.J.;Bennun, L.;Butchart, S.H.M.;Ferrier, S.;Foppen, R.P.B.;Joppa, L.;Juffe-Bignoli, D.;Knight, A.T.;Lamoreux, J.F.;Langhammer, P.F.;May, I.;Possingham, H.P.;Visconti, P.;Watson, J.E.M.;Woodley, S.
Published
2016
Publisher
Conservation Biology
Published Version DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.12609
Abstract
World governments have committed to increase the global protected areas coverage by 2020, but the effectiveness of this commitment for protecting biodiversity depends on where new protected areas are located. Threshold-based and complementarity-based approaches have been independently used to identify important sites for biodiversity. Here we bring together these approaches by performing a complementarity-based analysis of irreplaceability in Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas (IBAs; which are sites identified using a threshold-based approach). We determined whether irreplaceability values are higher inside than outside IBAs, and whether any observed difference depends on known characteristics of the IBAs. We focussed on three regions having comprehensive IBAs inventories and bird distribution atlases: Australia, Southern Africa and Europe. Irreplaceability values were significantly higher inside than outside IBAs, although differences were much smaller in Europe than elsewhere. Higher irreplaceability values in IBAs were associated with: presence and number of restricted-range species; number of criteria under which the site was identified; and mean geographic range size of the species for which the site was identified ('trigger species'). In addition, IBAs were characterised by higher irreplaceability values when using proportional species representation targets, rather than fixed targets. There were broadly comparable results both when measuring irreplaceability for trigger species and when considering all bird species, indicating a good surrogacy effect of the former. Recently the International Union for Conservation of Nature has convened a consultation to consolidate global standards for the identification of Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs), building from existing approaches like IBAs. Our results are important for informing this consultation, and in particular for a proposed irreplaceability criterion that will allow the new KBA standard to draw on the strengths of both threshold-based and complementarity-based approaches. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved
Keywords
complementarity;convention on Biological Diversity;irreplaceability;key biodiversity areas;restricted range species;systematic conservation planning;threatened species

Access Full Text

A full-text copy of this article may be available. Please email the WCS Library to request.




Back

PUB19114