Abstract

Large scale land-based investments have a significant impact on natural resources and environmental conditions. It is necessary to protect areas of high conservation value (HCV) within land management investments, such as the mining sector, to minimise this impact. The existence of high conservation value sites in locations with activities related to the mining sector is intended to maintain the ecological and conservation value of a mining investment area. We demonstrate a model that can identify potential high conservation value sites in mining areas using remote sensing data and spatial analysis compiled with field observation data. The research was conducted in one of the largest nickel mining areas (71,047 ha) in South Sulawesi, Indonesia. We mapped vegetation density using the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), calculated from Sentinel-2 imagery. We also collected biodiversity data in predetermined inventory sampling plots, which we then used to estimate species richness using the Shannon-Wiener diversity index. Using a linear regression model to compare the normalized difference vegetation index value in each sampling plot with the biodiversity value of flora and fauna, we then estimated biodiversity distribution patterns for the entire study area. We found that potential high conservation value areas (areas likely to have high biodiversity based on our regression model) covered 40,000 ha, more than half of the total concession area.

Highlights

  • The mining sector plays an important role in Indonesia's economic development

  • The normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) land cover analysis found that forest is the dominant land cover in the mining area, covering 75.24% of the total mining concession area

  • The study results demonstrated that remote sensing technology can be used to estimate high conservation value areas

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Summary

Introduction

The mining sector plays an important role in Indonesia's economic development. The mining sector contributed around 9.01% of the national gross domestic product in 2018, up from 6.55% in 2017 (Central Bureau of Statistics, 2020), creating jobs in rural areas, accelerating economic development and improving regional infrastructure (Hidayat et al, 2014; Suciyanti et al, 2018). An increase in large-scale land-based investments, such as investments in the mining sector, will probably have significant negative impacts on ecosystems (Ardhana, 2010; Ardhana, 2015; Mahalik, 2016; de Castro Pena et al, 2017; Sahide et al, 2018; Sonter et al, 2018; Sahide et al 2020). This is due to the forest clearing and conversion of natural landscapes, eliminating or reducing biodiversity (Salman et al, 2018; Fisher et al, 2020)

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