Browsing by Subject "Conservation planning"
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Item Open Access A MULTICRITERIA ANALYSIS OF THE CONSERVATION PLANNING TOOL OF THE NORTH CAROLINA NATURAL HERITAGE PROGRAM(2012-04-26) Yeh, Sung-KangLand conservation and land use planning are the essential approaches in mitigating human disturbances and maintaining ecological functions. These approaches require identification and prioritization of different land characteristics to efficiently conserve the areas that represent significant biodiversity values. In North Carolina, the Conservation Planning Tool (CPT) was developed by the North Carolina National Heritage Program (NCNHP) to achieve this goal. However, the weighting method in CPT falls short in that it does not assign greater credit to areas with multiple values, and it ignores the biophysical characteristics that may contribute to the values of biodiversity. In order to critique the issues in CPT, I developed a rating tool based on Multi-Attribute Utility Theory (MAUT) analysis and incorporated biophysical measurements into the new habitat prioritization. I consulted Allison Weakley, the Conservation Planner of the North Carolina Natural Heritage Program, to assess the levels of preference and weights for each measurement, and used these results to calculate the final score. Because the methods of utility and weight assessment in the two systems are considerably different, I used qualitative criteria to compare the advantages and disadvantages of the two rating systems. The results show that the new rating tool is able to address the weighting problem in CPT, is less redundant in the selection of measurements, and offers more comprehensive data completeness. On the other hand, CPT is friendlier for tool users who may not be familiar with the technical details, more flexible in accommodating new measurements, and more comprehensive in evaluating both aquatic and terrestrial habitats. Land conservation and land use planning are the essential approaches in mitigating human disturbances and maintaining ecological functions. These approaches require identification and prioritization of different land characteristics to efficiently conserve the areas that represent significant biodiversity values. In North Carolina, the Conservation Planning Tool (CPT) was developed by the North Carolina National Heritage Program (NCNHP) to achieve this goal. However, the weighting method in CPT falls short in that it does not assign greater credit to areas with multiple values, and it ignores the biophysical characteristics that may contribute to the values of biodiversity. In order to critique the issues in CPT, I developed a rating tool based on Multi-Attribute Utility Theory (MAUT) analysis and incorporated biophysical measurements into the new habitat prioritization. I consulted Allison Weakley, the Conservation Planner of the North Carolina Natural Heritage Program, to assess the levels of preference and weights for each measurement, and used these results to calculate the final score. Because the methods of utility and weight assessment in the two systems are considerably different, I used qualitative criteria to compare the advantages and disadvantages of the two rating systems. The results show that the new rating tool is able to address the weighting problem in CPT, is less redundant in the selection of measurements, and offers more comprehensive data completeness. On the other hand, CPT is friendlier for tool users who may not be familiar with the technical details, more flexible in accommodating new measurements, and more comprehensive in evaluating both aquatic and terrestrial habitats.Item Open Access AN ANALYSIS OF ECOSYSTEM SERVICES AND BENEFITS TO GUIDE CONSERVATION IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY WATERSHED(2021-04-30) Cai, Chuqi; Dixon, Ardath; Jaffe, Catherine; Rieger, ErikThe Chesapeake Bay Watershed drains approximately 64,000 square miles of farms, cities, and forests into the largest estuary in the United States. The watershed crosses six state boundaries and is home to over 18 million people. Our client, the Chesapeake Conservancy, is a long-standing contributor to conservation and restoration efforts throughout this complex watershed. Recently, the Conservancy and its regional partners have adopted a framework to conserve 30% of the watershed by 2030 and 50% by 2050. Our research aims to advance the scientific and economic case for this ambitious 30 by 30 land protection goal. Using a case study approach, we apply geospatial and economic analyses to examine and communicate the key ecological and economic benefits these lands provide to both people and nature. Our process is couched in a multi-criteria, ecosystem services framework. Our results show hotspots of unprotected lands along the eastern and western shores of the bay with multiple co-benefits projected to increase in economic value over time. Targeting 30 by 30 conservation actions to these lands will likely maximize regional conservation benefits.Item Open Access ASSESSING THE BIODIVERSITY SUPPORT POTENTIAL OF FOREST PATCHES FOR CONSERVATION PLANNING(2008-12-04T19:39:07Z) Leddick, JesseBiological diversity is a critical component controlling ecosystem function and resiliency, yet it remains difficult to measure at the spatial and temporal scales relevant to conservation. Recently, biodiversity surrogates have emerged as a potentially useful tool for estimating the ability of a habitat patch to support biological diversity over the long-term, termed biodiversity support potential. The objective of the present study was to assess the biodiversity support potential of forest habitat patches in North Carolina. I used the diversity of unique land cover types and biophysical conditions as surrogates for biodiversity. Biophysical conditions were captured through the use of terrain-based indices: a topographic convergence index, potential radiation load, and elevation; these were indexed and combined to generate unique environmental conditions affecting the distribution of plant community types. Modeled estimates of soil moisture were ground-truthed to verify that topographic convergence is a reasonable index of soil moisture. Natural Heritage Element Occurrences were used to weight discrete environmental conditions and land covers according to their current biodiversity value. Finally, Significant Natural Heritage Areas were used as a reference to assesses whether biodiversity surrogates effectively capture habitats presumed to have the highest biodiversity value, and thus, whether surrogates are capable of evaluating existing networks of protected lands and identifying conservation priorities. The study revealed that both environmental settings and vegetation community types may be effectively used as surrogates for biodiversity. While surrogate assessment suggests that current biodiversity value (estimated by weighted metrics) should be considered distinct from biodiversity support potential (estimated by unweighted zip code diversity), both metrics are relevant and should be incorporated into conservation planning initiatives. Using geospatial tools developed in this study, estimates of biodiversity support potential and value can be generated for all regions of the United States using existing, publicly available data. Environmental settings may be adjusted to capture the most relevant characteristics of each ecoregion, especially as additional data sets (including fine-scale soils data) becomes nationally available. Biodiversity surrogates may also be readily calibrated through the use Natural Heritage data. Thus, I call for increased cooperation and data-sharing in future conservation planning and implementation efforts.Item Open Access Clean Water Through Conservation in the Jordan Lake Watershed(2019-04-25) Tucker, Emily; Ray, James; Parks, RyanWatershed management is becoming increasingly holistic. Novel approaches are needed to satisfy the interests of diverse stakeholders – including municipal water users, environmental groups, and agricultural communities. In the rapidly developing Jordan Lake Watershed, stakeholders are eagerly seeking comprehensive approaches to prevent further water quality degradation and the loss and fragmentation of ecological resources. We present an approach for identifying these opportunities. First, we identify high quality natural areas that should be protected to maintain water quality. Second, we highlight riparian restoration areas that maximize pollutant retention and bridge the watershed’s biodiversity hotspots. Finally, we evaluate the financial costs and benefits farmers face when adopting conservation agricultural practices to determine where they will be most successful. In combination, these practices can protect, connect and restore a high-functioning watershed.Item Open Access Ecosystem Services in a Conservation Planning Framework(2009-04-24T13:53:29Z) Cooley, DavidNatural ecosystems provide several important services to society, including water purification, crop pollination, and carbon storage. Until recently, however, these services were not paid for in market transactions, giving landowners little incentive to provide services at optimal levels. Payments for ecosystem services (PES) have addressed this by compensating landowners for the services they provide. PES have the potential to become powerful tools for conservation work, prompting the need for conservation planning for these services. In this project, the modeling tool InVEST was used to determine the spatial distributions of four ecosystem services (carbon storage, water purification, pollination, and biodiversity protection) for a study area in North Carolina. The outputs of these models were then overlaid to determine areas of the landscape that are important for the provision of multiple services. The individual and multiple ecosystem service maps were then used to help prioritize investment in specific property parcels based on the ecosystem services each provides under several land use change scenarios, including afforestation, wetland restoration, and the planting of riparian buffers.Item Open Access Geological Control of Floristic Composition in Amazonian Forests(2010) Higgins, Mark AlexanderAmazonia contains the largest remaining tracts of undisturbed tropical forest on earth, and is thus critical to international nature conservation and carbon sequestration efforts. Amazonian forests are notoriously difficult to study, however, due to their species richness and inaccessibility. This has limited efforts to produce the accurate, high-resolution biodiversity maps needed for conservation and development. The aims of the research described here were to identify efficient solutions to the problems of tropical forest inventory; to use these methods to identify floristic patterns and their causes in western Amazonia; and propose new means to map floristic patterns in these forests.
Using tree inventories in the vicinity of Iquitos, Peru, I and a colleague systematically evaluated methods for rapid tropical forest inventory. Of these, inventory of particular taxonomic groups, or taxonomic scope inventory, was the most efficient, and was able to capture a majority of the pattern observed by traditional inventory techniques with one-fifth to one-twentieth the number of stems and species. Based on the success of this approach, I and colleagues specifically evaluated two plant groups, the Pteridophytes (ferns and fern allies) and the Melastomataceae (a family of shrubs and small trees), for use in rapid inventory. Floristic patterns based on inventories from either group were significantly associated with those based on the tree flora, and inventories of Pteridophytes in particular were in most cases able to capture the majority of floristic patterns identified by tree inventories. These findings indicate that Pteridophyte and Melastomataceae inventories are useful tools for rapid tropical forest inventory.
Using Pteridophyte and Melastomataceae inventories from 138 sites in northwestern Amazonia, combined with satellite data and soil sampling, I and colleagues studied the causes of vegetation patterns in western Amazonian forests. On the basis of these data, we identified a floristic discontinuity of at least 300km in northern Peru, corresponding to a 15-fold difference in soil cation concentrations and an erosion-generated geological boundary. On the basis of this finding, we assembled continent-scale satellite image mosaics, and used these to search for additional discontinuities in western Amazonia. These mosaics indicate a floristic and geological discontinuity of at least 1500km western Brasil, driven by similar erosional processes identified in our study area. We suggest that this represents a chemical and ecological boundary between western and central Amazonia.
Using a second network of 52 pteridophyte and soil inventories in northwestern Amazonia, we further studied the role of geology in generating floristic pattern. Consistent with earlier findings, we found that two widespread geological formations in western Amazonia differ eight-fold difference in soil cation concentrations and in a majority of their species. Difference in elevation, used as a surrogate for geological formation, furthermore explained up to one-third of the variation in plant species composition between these formations. Significant correlations between elevation, and cation concentrations and soil texture, confirmed that differences in species composition between these formations are driven by differences in soil properties. On the basis of these findings, we were able to use SRTM elevation data to accurately model species composition throughout our study area.
I argue that Amazonian forests are partitioned into large-area units on the basis of geological formations and their edaphic properties. This finding has implications for both the ecology and evolution of these forests, and suggests that conservation strategies be implemented on a region-by-region basis. Fortunately, the methods described here provide a means for generating accurate and detailed maps of floristic patterns in these vast and remote forests.
Item Open Access IDENTIFYING FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY FOR CONSERVATION PLANNING(2007-05) Tutak, JocelynThe Washington Chapter of The Nature Conservancy (TNC) is interested in creating a method by which to identify statewide functional connectivity in order to guide a more effective conservation planning process. Past conservation planning efforts by TNC had established conservation priorities separately for terrestrial and freshwater habitats, and did not consider functional connectivity as a necessary component of conservation targets. I developed this method using geospatial analysis and NHDPlus, a free geospatial data package, to identify focal habitat in western Washington in relation to stream reaches using hydrological catchments. I also identified the effect of high-impact land use on water quality in those catchments. I created a graph network of focal habitat, and analyzed it in order to identify patches and scales important for maintaining connectivity. The result is a method that uses readily available, standardized data to identify functionally connected habitat for multiple focal species at many spatial scales. It includes a hydrological component that incorporates freshwater protection. With additional study, the method can be used to incorporate a functional connectivity perspective in conjunction with existing conservation planning strategies. By identifying functional connectivity as an integral component of conservation planning, conservation efforts will better protect biodiversity by allowing for functional, viable populations to exist.Item Open Access MORE THAN BUCKS AND ACRES: ASSESSING THE VALUE OF CONSERVED LANDS(2010-04-29T19:56:49Z) Ryman, GinevraMany non-profit conservation organizations resort to measuring their success in term of acres protected and dollars raised, also known as ‘bucks and acres’, for lack of better indicators. However, it is unclear how well bucks and acres actually measure progress toward mission driven goals such as the conservation of biodiversity. Many land trusts are now in the process of creating new indicators to better measure their progress. This study assesses the conservation benefits of the Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy lands at both a landscape and parcel level. My analysis focused on 1) parcel-specific and cumulative conservation benefits of biodiversity protection, 2) landscape connectivity, and 3) scenic viewsheds. The conservancy has protected high proportions of Significant Natural Heritage Areas when compared to other private lands in the study area. However, private lands tended to have higher modeled species biodiversity than lands protected by the conservancy. Other commonly observed spatial benefits provided by Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy projects were contiguity with other protected parcels, buffering of publically protected lands, and protection of scenic viewsheds from the Blue Ridge Parkway and Appalachian Trail. It is important for land trusts to be able to demonstrate that they are meeting their goals to private funders, their members, as well as to the general public. These findings will assist the Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy in measuring their conservation success, demonstrating their progress to funding organizations and the public, and to serve as a baseline measure.Item Open Access Relationship between giant panda populations and selected ecosystem services(Ecosystem Services, 2020-08-01) Zhang, J; Pimm, SL; Xu, W; Shi, X; Xiao, Y; Kong, L; Fan, X; Ouyang, ZThe Convention on Biological Diversity's Aichi Targets address both biodiversity and ecosystem services. We explore the relationship between giant panda populations and three ecosystem services: carbon sequestration, water retention, and soil retention. Do pandas prefer areas with higher than average values of these services? Areas may be good for pandas but not for these ecosystem services, and vice versa. Answering these questions can focus panda conservation. We map their spatial distribution and temporal changes from 2000 to 2015, by watershed, to target future protected areas for both pandas and these ecosystem services. Pandas occupy watersheds with above-average carbon sequestration and water retention. There is no tendency for pandas to be increasing in watersheds that have higher than average values of these ecosystem services or in watersheds where they are improving. Protected areas represented watersheds with higher than average values of these ecosystem services but without pandas only poorly. Watersheds with pandas do provide higher than average ecosystem services, but watersheds above average for these ecosystem services often lack pandas. Those areas might be potentially important for pandas, but obstacles block their way. We identified conservation areas combining habitats, population, activity range, and higher than average values of these ecosystem services and then proposed new protected areas.Item Open Access Targeting Potential Conservation Sites for Swallow-tailed Kites (Elanoides forficatus) in Levy County, Florida(2009-04-24T14:11:50Z) Gruber, JuliaThe Swallow-tailed Kite (Elanoides forficatus) is facing population declines due to habitat loss and fragmentation across much of its remnant range. Current population estimates suggest that fewer than 5000 of these graceful birds of prey remain, with 60-65% of the population breeding in Florida during the summer months. Levy County, Florida, is a known “hot spot” for kites and serves as the focal area for this project. The goal of this study is to provide an objective, science-based approach for prioritizing areas for kite conservation, as it is critical that conservation resources be used efficiently. Using a species specific habitat model and county tax mapping data, nine ecological and socio-economic criteria were developed in GIS for inclusion in the prioritization scheme. A multi-criteria compromise analysis was performed to calculate a conservation score for each parcel, effectively ranking the parcels in terms of their value for kite conservation. The mean score of the parcels under consideration was 19.6, with 94 parcels scoring greater than 70. Parcels that have already been conserved scored significantly higher (mean = 44.8), which indicates that the conservation areas in Levy County are protecting habitat suitable for Swallow-tailed Kites. The criteria ranking and weighting schemes used for this analysis can be easily modified to meet the needs and goals of different end-users. Cooperative management, land acquisitions, conservation easements, and landowner partnerships are a few examples of conservation actions that may benefit this imperiled species. This parcel prioritization scheme, designed specifically for Swallow-tailed Kites, provides an analytical approach for planning such conservation efforts.Item Open Access The effectiveness of the zoning of China's protected areas(Biological Conservation, 2016-12-01) Xu, Weihua; Li, Xiaosong; Pimm, Stuart L; Hull, Vanessa; Zhang, Jingjing; Zhang, Lu; Xiao, Yi; Zheng, Hua; Ouyang, ZIncreasing human numbers and aspirations threaten protected areas worldwide. China faces especially strong pressure since many people live inside protected areas. It has sought to balance human needs and conservation goals within them by creating mixed zoning schemes loosely based on UNESCO's Man and the Biosphere Programme. These include strictly-protected core zones, buffer zones allowing limited human use, and experimental zones that examine different land-use options. To test the efficacy of this zoning, we employed field surveys and remote sensing to assess the penetration of agricultural and urban land into 109 national nature reserves in China for 2000 and 2010. Human disturbance was lowest in core zones and highest in experimental zones in both 2000 and 2010. Over this period, 82% of the reserves were unchanged or had decreased human disturbance. Nonetheless, overall human disturbance increased by 7%, 4%, and 5% in the core, buffer and experimental zones respectively. Almost all the increase in the core zone was in four wetland reserves, where human actions converted large areas to agriculture. Some 58% of reserves experienced some human disturbance in core zones in 2010, demonstrating a need for more effective zoning. The findings have broader implications for protected area management globally because they highlight the strengths and weaknesses of zoning for balancing human needs and species conservation.Item Open Access Using the Ecosystem Service Value of Habitat Areas for Wildlife Conservation: Implications of Carbon-Rich Peatswamp Forests for the Bornean Orang-utan, Pongo Pygmaeus(2010-04-30T16:05:59Z) Cattau, MeganFragmentation of lowland peatswamp forests in Borneo poses a serious threat to the endangered Bornean orang-utan, whose decreasing population trends are attributed primarily to habitat loss. The orang-utan is projected to be extinct by 2020 unless existing populations can be connected and new conservation areas established, which is not currently economically viable. However, peatswamp forests, on which orang-utans can be found at their greatest densities, have a large capacity for carbon sequestration and storage and, thus, a high potential value on the carbon market. Unfortunately, as these wetlands are being deforested, drained, and burned for development, the peat soil is decomposing, emitting CO2, and impacting global climate change. This project is a spatially explicit analysis of an area of fragmented peatswamp forest in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia that explores how the conservation targets of ape preservation and carbon sequestration and storage can be mutually satisfied through land management strategies. First, I prioritized intact peatswamp forest patches for conservation based on orang-utan presence and patch geometry metrics. To do this, I surveyed line transects in the study area, Block C of the Former Mega Rice Project, for orang-utan sleeping nests and produced a regional density estimate of 2.517 individuals / km2. I identified patches greater than 350 ha from Landsat 7 TM data and then calculated the number of individuals and patch geometry metrics for each patch. I found the total population on Block C to be 2,161 individuals, only 1,146 of which are located in forest fragments with a population size large enough to be considered viable. I generated a model of habitat suitability for the orang-utan using maximum entropy methods. Then, I proposed corridors through degraded areas between the six priority patches of intact forest using least-cost path methods. The corridors included areas of high habitat suitability and also areas of high carbon value, and would increase the viable population size of orang-utans to 1,788 individuals. This project demonstrates how the incentive of carbon financing can make possible wildlife protection strategies, and how we might begin to use spatial planning to maximize biodiversity and ecosystem service benefits on the landscape.Item Open Access Wolves in lower Michigan: habitat modeling and capacity estimation(2010-12-07) Claeys, GinaGray wolf populations have been rebounding in the Great Lakes region, after being nearly extirpated from the conterminous United States. Breeding populations of wolves have established in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan but have not yet become widely established in the Lower Peninsula (LP) of Michigan, despite several sightings of wolves in the LP since 2004. The objective of this analysis was to determine the quantity of potential habitat for wolves in the LP using wolf occurrence data obtained by radio telemetry, Maxent software, and ArcGIS. The habitat model was evaluated to determine if the potential habitat could support a viable population. A species distribution model (SDM) was created in Maxent and analyzed in ArcGIS to estimate the amount of potential habitat for wolves in the LP. Connectivity of potential habitat was evaluated by looking at least cost paths, corridors, and potential dispersal land. I found that there is 2,674-3,246 km2 of potential habitat in the LP, which could support 52-63 wolves. This is below the minimum of 100 necessary to sustain a viable population. All habitat patches at least 50 km2 in size are in the northern LP, but are not connected by land suitable for dispersal. Thus, although there are habitat patches of sufficient size in lower Michigan, it is likely that packs of wolves that may inhabit these patches will remain relatively isolated and have difficulties dispersing throughout lower Michigan. It is unlikely that they will be able to inhabit or disperse through the southern LP without land management geared towards creating larger unfragmented habitat patches and suitable dispersal corridors. This analysis highlights the need for land management geared towards wolves in order to allow them to continue to recover their former range in the United States.