Abstract

BackgroundPrioritization schemes usually highlight species-rich areas, where many species are at imminent risk of extinction. To be ecologically relevant these schemes should also include species biological traits into area-setting methods. Furthermore, in a world of limited funds for conservation, conservation action is constrained by land acquisition costs. Hence, including economic costs into conservation priorities can substantially improve their conservation cost-effectiveness.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe examined four global conservation scenarios for carnivores based on the joint mapping of economic costs and species biological traits. These scenarios identify the most cost-effective priority sets of ecoregions, indicating best investment opportunities for safeguarding every carnivore species, and also establish priority sets that can maximize species representation in areas harboring highly vulnerable species. We compared these results with a scenario that minimizes the total number of ecoregions required for conserving all species, irrespective of other factors. We found that cost-effective conservation investments should focus on 41 ecoregions highlighted in the scenario that consider simultaneously both ecoregion vulnerability and economic costs of land acquisition. Ecoregions included in priority sets under these criteria should yield best returns of investments since they harbor species with high extinction risk and have lower mean land cost.Conclusions/SignificanceOur study highlights ecoregions of particular importance for the conservation of the world's carnivores defining global conservation priorities in analyses that encompass socioeconomic and life-history factors. We consider the identification of a comprehensive priority-set of areas as a first step towards an in-situ biodiversity maintenance strategy.

Highlights

  • Conservation assessment and planning aim to optimize the allocation of scarce conservation funds by prioritizing areas for protection [1,2]

  • We examined four conservation scenarios based on the joint mapping of economic costs and species biological traits, which (1) identify the most cost-effective sets of ecoregions, indicating best options for investments for safeguarding each carnivore species, and (2) establish sets that can maximize species representation in areas that harbor carnivores with higher extinction risks and require urgent conservation action

  • Our study highlights ecoregions of particular importance for the conservation of the world’s carnivores, and indicates global conservation priorities for these vertebrates explicitly incorporating land acquisition costs as a key socioeconomic factor, as well as variation in extinction risk based on relevant biological traits

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Summary

Introduction

Conservation assessment and planning aim to optimize the allocation of scarce conservation funds by prioritizing areas for protection [1,2]. Several major templates of global prioritization for biodiversity conservation were produced over the past decades [14], including the Biodiversity Hotspots and the High-Biodiversity Wilderness Areas [11,15], the Global 200 ecoregions [12], and the Endemic Bird Areas [16] These templates fit within the core of conservation planning theory, i.e. the conceptual framework that concerns irreplaceable and/or vulnerable areas [1]. Including economic costs into conservation priorities can substantially improve their conservation cost-effectiveness

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