摘要

Site selection, reserve selection, and spatial conservation prioritization are terms that have been used for various algorithms and methods for the spatial allocation of conservation resources. Many of these methods start from the setting of targets or weights for different conservation features. Almost always there is only one set of targets or weights, thus implicitly assuming that priorities stay the same through the entire planning region. However, priorities for biodiversity governance could vary between regions. For example, priorities inside countries could be different from global priorities. Inside a country, different stakeholders could hold different priorities. Thus, priorities could vary between sub-regions while ecological processes, such as connectivity, cross borders without regard to administrative boundaries. Here we describe how it is possible to account for conservation priorities that vary between administrative subregions in conservation prioritization. We illustrate how assumptions about selection methods and feature weights can significantly influence the outcome mapping of conservation priority. We also show how placing high emphasis on local considerations reduces the cost-efficiency of the global conservation outcome. Analyses proposed here will be made publicly available in software (Zonation) capable for large-scale high-resolution conservation prioritization.

  • 出版日期2011-5