Abstract

Protected areas (PAs) not only serve as refuges of biodiversity conservation but are also part of large ecosystems and are vulnerable to change caused by human activity from surrounding lands, especially in biodiversity hotspots. Assessing threats to PAs and surrounding areas is therefore a critical step in effective conservation planning. We apply a threat framework as a means of quantitatively assessing local and surrounding threats to different types of PAs with gradient buffers, and to main ecoregions in the Hengduan Mountain Hotspot of southwest China. Our findings show that national protected areas (NPAs) have lower and significantly lower threat values (p<0.05) than provincial protected areas (PPAs) and other protected areas (OPAs), respectively, which indicates that NPAs are lands with a lower threat level and higher levels of protection and management. PAs have clear edge effects, as the proportion of areas with low threat levels decline dramatically in the 5-kilometer buffers just outside the PAs. However, NPAs suffered greater declines (58.3%) than PPAs (34.8%) and OPAs (33.4%) in the 5-kilometer buffers. Moreover, a significant positive correlation was found between the size of PAs and the proportion of areas with low threat levels that they contained in both PAs and PA buffers (p<0.01). To control or mitigate current threats at the regional scale, PA managers often require quantitative information related to threat intensities and spatial distribution. The threat assessment in the Hengduan Mountain Hotspot will be useful to policy makers and managers in their efforts to establish effective plans and target-oriented management strategies.

Highlights

  • Protected areas (PAs) are a cornerstone of biodiversity conservation efforts, as they provide various species with safe havens [1]

  • The region of Southeast Tibet shrublands and meadows (STSM), which accounted for 43.4% of the total area in the Hengduan Mountain Hotspot, was at a relatively lower risk

  • This study shows that the local threat index differs significantly between paired areas inside PAs and areas outside PAs in each ecoregion

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Protected areas (PAs) are a cornerstone of biodiversity conservation efforts, as they provide various species with safe havens [1]. The rapid increase in human land use surrounding PAs gradually diminishes these protected areas’ capacity to preserve species and maintain. PAs may not be effective when they fail to limit habitat loss and are unconnected via corridors to other wild areas. Among those threats, human activities such as expanding settlement, agricultural activities, and road construction may cause further serious threats by reducing the effective size of PAs, damaging ecosystem services, and increasing exposure at PA edges [3, 7,8,9,10]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call