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Socioeconomic and political trade‐offs in biodiversity conservation: a case study of the C errado B iodiversity H otspot, B razil
Author(s) -
Faleiro Frederico V.,
Loyola Rafael D.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
diversity and distributions
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.918
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1472-4642
pISSN - 1366-9516
DOI - 10.1111/ddi.12072
Subject(s) - biodiversity , socioeconomic status , land use , geography , politics , population , prioritization , range (aeronautics) , ecology , environmental resource management , biology , business , economics , political science , demography , sociology , law , materials science , process management , composite material
Aim To analyse spatial trade‐offs in conservation of mammals, considering benefits of biodiversity conservation and socioeconomic costs. Location Cerrado B iodiversity H otspot, B razil. Methods We built ecological niche models ( ENM s) for 154 mammals inhabiting the cerrado. We combined model projections to produce consensus maps of species' distributions for three types of models (envelope, statistical and machine‐learning models). We used these range summaries as input data in spatial prioritization analyses. We compared six conservation scenarios, considering human population density, land cost, anthropogenic land use, political willingness to act and the distribution of species using trade‐off analyses. We complemented the current network of protected areas, aiming to achieve a target of 17% of land protection in the cerrado. Results Species‐rich sites coincide with regions with high human population, high land cost, high anthropogenic land use and diverse levels of political willingness to act. We found a significant change in spatial priorities when we included socioeconomic and political dimensions in analyses: top‐priority sites moved north, reduced by 68% potential conservation conflicts with human population, reduced by 72% the total monetary cost of actions and reduced by 68% conflict with other anthropogenic land uses. It also increased by 80% the beneficial effect of political willingness to act. Main conclusions Our results reinforce the idea that using only biological criteria for proposing spatial conservation priorities can undermine conservation plans given increases in socioeconomic and political conflicts.

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