Abstract

Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) provide geographic targets for the expansion of protected area coverage, and identify sites for urgent conservation action. Identification of KBAs in the Indo-Burma Hotspot was undertaken during 2003, for a region of analysis comprising Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar (Burma), Thailand and Vietnam, plus parts of southern China. The starting point was information on 282 Important Bird Areas identified by BirdLife International and collaborators. These data were then overlaid with point locality data on globally threatened mammals, reptiles, amphibians, freshwater fish and plants, with additional KBAs identified as required. Through this process, a total of 438 KBAs were identified, covering 258,085km2 or 11.5 percent of the region of analysis. Only 58 percent of the KBAs are wholly or partly included within protected areas, suggesting that there may be a need for further expansion of protected area networks, particularly in Myanmar and Vietnam. The criteria for KBA identification are triggered by 812 species, of which 23 are believed only to occur at a single KBA globally. The KBAs have proven to be a useful conservation priority setting tool in Indo-Burma, helping to guide investments by various donors and application of environmental safeguard policies by international financial institutions. There are fewer examples of KBAs being used to guide expansion of protected area systems in Indo-Burma. In large part, this is because the period of rapid expansion of protected areas in most hotspot countries predated the KBA identification process, and political support for further significant expansion is currently limited.

Highlights

  • The Indo-Burma Biodiversity Hotspot is centered on the Indochinese Peninsula, and comprises Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar (Burma), Thailand and Vietnam, plus parts of southern China and northeastern India

  • The series is edited under the auspices of the IUCN World Commission on Protected Areas/Species Survival Commission Joint Task Force on ‘Biodiversity and Protected Areas’, with the editors supported by BirdLife International, Conservation International, IUCN, National Fish & Wildlife Foundation, NatureServe, Parks Canada, and Plantlife International

  • This paper describes how Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) have been identified in the Indo-Burma Hotspot, and briefly discusses opportunities for further improvement of the analysis and application to conservation planning and priority setting

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Summary

Introduction

The Indo-Burma Biodiversity Hotspot is centered on the Indochinese Peninsula, and comprises Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar (Burma), Thailand and Vietnam, plus parts of southern China and northeastern India. The topography of the hotspot is complex, and is characterized by a series of north-south mountain ranges, which descend from the Himalayan chain and its south eastern extensions. Centers of endemism include montane isolates (such as Myanmar’s Mount Victoria and Vietnam’s Da Lat Plateau), limestone karst areas (such as those in northern Vietnam and China’s Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region), and lowland evergreen forests (most notably the Annamese lowlands of Vietnam and Lao PDR, which are home to flagship species such as Saola Pseudoryx nghetinhensis)

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