Back to Search Start Over

Targeted conservation to safeguard a biodiversity hotspot from climate and land-cover change

Authors :
Matthew J. Struebig
Andreas Wilting
David L.A. Gaveau
Erik Meijaard
Robert J. Smith
Manuela Fischer
Kristian Metcalfe
Stephanie Kramer-Schadt
Tajuddin Abdullah
Nicola Abram
Raymond Alfred
Marc Ancrenaz
Dave M. Augeri
Jerrold L. Belant
Henry Bernard
Mark Bezuijen
Arjan Boonman
Ramesh Boonratana
Tjalle Boorsma
Christine Breitenmoser-Würsten
Jedediah Brodie
Susan M. Cheyne
Carolyn Devens
J. Will Duckworth
Nicole Duplaix
James Eaton
Charles Francis
Gabriella Fredriksson
Anthony J. Giordano
Catherine Gonner
Jon Hall
Mark E. Harrison
Andrew J. Hearn
Ilja Heckmann
Matt Heydon
Heribert Hofer
Jason Hon
Simon Husson
Faisal Ali Anwarali Khan
Tigga Kingston
Danielle Kreb
Martjan Lammertink
David Lane
Felicia Lasmana
Lim Boo Liat
Norman T-L. Lim
Jana Lindenborn
Brent Loken
David W. Macdonald
Andrew J. Marshall
Ibnu Maryanto
John Mathai
William J. McShea
Azlan Mohamed
Miyabi Nakabayashi
Yoshihiro Nakashima
Jürgen Niedballa
Sephy Noerfahmy
Sophie Persey
Amanda Peter
Sander Pieterse
John D. Pilgrim
Edward Pollard
Surya Purnama
Andjar Rafiastanto
Vanessa Reinfelder
Christine Reusch
Craig Robson
Joanna Ross
Rustam Rustam
Lili Sadikin
Hiromitsu Samejima
Eddy Santosa
Iman Sapari
Hiroshi Sasaki
Anne K. Scharf
Gono Semiadi
Chris R. Shepherd
Rachel Sykes
Tim van Berkel
Konstans Wells
Ben Wielstra
Anna Wong
Source :
Current Biology, 25(3), 372-378. CELL PRESS
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
CELL PRESS, 2015.

Abstract

SummaryResponses of biodiversity to changes in both land cover and climate are recognized [1] but still poorly understood [2]. This poses significant challenges for spatial planning as species could shift, contract, expand, or maintain their range inside or outside protected areas [2–4]. We examine this problem in Borneo, a global biodiversity hotspot [5], using spatial prioritization analyses that maximize species conservation under multiple environmental-change forecasts. Climate projections indicate that 11%–36% of Bornean mammal species will lose ≥30% of their habitat by 2080, and suitable ecological conditions will shift upslope for 23%–46%. Deforestation exacerbates this process, increasing the proportion of species facing comparable habitat loss to 30%–49%, a 2-fold increase on historical trends. Accommodating these distributional changes will require conserving land outside existing protected areas, but this may be less than anticipated from models incorporating deforestation alone because some species will colonize high-elevation reserves. Our results demonstrate the increasing importance of upland reserves and that relatively small additions (16,000–28,000 km2) to the current conservation estate could provide substantial benefits to biodiversity facing changes to land cover and climate. On Borneo, much of this land is under forestry jurisdiction, warranting targeted conservation partnerships to safeguard biodiversity in an era of global change.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Biology, 25(3), 372-378. CELL PRESS
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5bef3eee575c4f480e61b6e35a6b9aa1