Conservation Science and Practice (Jun 2020)

Delineating greater ecosystems around protected areas to guide conservation

  • R. Travis Belote,
  • Melissa B. Wilson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.196
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 6
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Protected areas represent a key strategy to conserve biodiversity. However, human land use and other impacts outside protected areas boundaries significantly influence species and ecosystems within protected areas. Therefore, identifying and delineating important lands surrounding protected areas may be critical to developing conservation strategies to sustain biodiversity. Here, we identify greater ecosystems of protected areas in the contiguous United States by delineating permeable wildlands located adjacent to protected area borders using the global human footprint map as the basis for estimating permeability. We evaluated how elevating the conservation status of greater ecosystems could help achieve aspirational targets for protecting additional terrestrial land area while better representing ecological diversity. We then assessed the feasibility of elevating conservation in greater ecosystems by quantifying the composition of land ownership and existing conservation status. Greater ecosystems of different protected areas often occur as large complexes that could be used to manage protected areas and monitor their status under regional conservation strategies. Elevating the conservation status of greater ecosystems could aid in achieving international targets while increasing the representation of vegetative types within conservation reserves. The most connected and permeable lands surrounding protected areas are dominated by public land (managed by the U.S. federal and state governments), though the amount of public land within greater ecosystems decreased with distance from protected areas. Public lands may provide opportunities to elevate the conservation status of greater ecosystems surrounding protected areas through policy and management changes. We focused on the contiguous United States, but our methods could be applied globally (which we demonstrate). To achieve bold international conservation goals, identifying the greater ecosystems around protected areas and developing conservation strategies of their landscape context will ultimately benefit species and ecosystems in protected areas.

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