Comprehensive criteria for biodiversity evaluation in conservation planning

Authors: Regan, Helen1; Davis, Frank; Andelman, Sandy; Widyanata, Astrid; Freese, Mariah

Source: Biodiversity and Conservation, Volume 16, Number 9, August 2007 , pp. 2715-2728(14)

Publisher: Springer

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Abstract:

In this paper we present the results of a multi-criteria decision analysis used to identify a comprehensive set of criteria for assigning biodiversity value to sites for conservation planning. For effective conservation management, biodiversity value needs to be a composite of biotic and abiotic factors. However, in the reserve design literature, conservation value is assigned with a limited set of metrics usually based on comprehensiveness, representativeness and persistence which may be insufficient at fully capturing biodiversity value. A group of conservation specialists in California, USA, used a multi-criteria decision making framework to elucidate and weight criteria for scoring biodiversity value at sites. A formal model for consensus and negotiation was applied to aggregate individuals' criteria weights across all group members. The group identified ecological condition, followed by biotic composition as the most important contributors to site conservation value. Long- and short-term threats causing fragmentation and degradation are also important criteria to consider. Key criteria are identified for which further data collection would serve the greatest purpose in prioritizing sites and the role of prioritization criteria in the larger context of systematic conservation planning is discussed. With the recognition that biodiversity value plays an important role in conservation decisions, the criteria presented here represents a comprehensive suite of factors to consider when assigning biodiversity value to sites for conservation planning. These can serve as an encompassing list which other groups can customize for the purpose of biodiversity evaluation for alternative conservation planning contexts.

Keywords: Biodiversity value; Conservation planning; Group decision making; Multi-criteria decision making

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1007/s10531-006-9100-3

Affiliations: 1: Email: hregan@sciences.sdsu.edu

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