Abstract

Well-managed and connected protected area networks are needed to combat the 6th mass extinction, yet the implementation of plans intended to secure landscape connectivity remains insufficient. The failure to translate planning efforts into effective action (i.e., the research-implementation gap) hinders our ability to conserve biodiversity threatened by ongoing climate change and habitat fragmentation. Sustained collaboration between researchers and practitioners to co-produce conservation strategies can bridge this gap by providing end-users with implementation guidance based on legitimate, relevant, and trusted information. However, few case studies capture methods for the co-production and use of climate-wise connectivity knowledge. Here we describe the framework for sustained engagement used by a multi-jurisdictional practitioner network to co-produce climate-wise linkages for the interior coastal ranges in Northern California. We found iterative co-production shaped ecological objectives, input data, analytical methods, and implementation priorities. Stakeholders used both co-produced and local socio-ecological (e.g., development threat, management priorities) knowledge to finalize corridor implementation plans. Priority corridors afforded greater climate benefit and were more likely to connect lands managed by participant organizations. Our results demonstrate how collaborative partnerships can bridge the gap between connectivity research and implementation. Lessons learned, outcomes, and future plans provide insights to advance landscape-scale resilience to climate change.

Highlights

  • Halting biodiversity loss, as articulated in sustainable development goal 15 (SDG 15) of the UnitedNations, cannot be accomplished through the existing network of protected areas (PAs) [1]

  • Beyond protecting species and their habitats, protected areas are expected to play a role in mitigating the impacts of climate change on biodiversity [5,6]

  • Four overarching concerns and challenges voiced by stakeholders were habitat fragmentation, ongoing human impacts, climate change, and socio-economic constraints

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Summary

Introduction

Cannot be accomplished through the existing network of protected areas (PAs) [1]. Central to climate change adaptation policies proposed by countries worldwide [7], the long-term conservation potential of PAs depends on their managers’ ability to maintain or enhance conditions that promote biodiversity over time. This is of concern because most protected lands will not contain the same climate types in the future that they currently safeguard, suggesting there may be turnover in community composition in PAs worldwide [8].

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