Abstract

Despite the protected area expansion over the last decades, biodiversity continues to decline. The EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2030, as well as the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, call for 30 % coverage by protected areas of the land and sea in order to halt and reverse biodiversity loss. Here, we use European species assessed as threatened on the IUCN Red List – the ones facing the most imminent threat of extinction - to guide the proposed expansion. We overlapped the ranges of 2290 threatened terrestrial and freshwater resident species and 127,046 terrestrial protected areas (28,130 Natura2000 sites and 98,916 nationally designated protected areas) in the EU and we found that species' EU ranges are covered on average 49.6 % by protected areas (41.5 % by Natura2000 and 34.0 % by nationally designated protected areas). We found 71 Gap0.1 species (<0.1 % coverage), most of which are invertebrates and endemic to southern EU islands. The southern EU countries have the highest number of threatened endemic species, they offer among the highest coverage to threatened species ranges and they have almost reached the 30 % land coverage by protected areas. Therefore, the expansion of the protected area network, should not be guided solely by percentage of area targets, but instead by biodiversity needs. Although it should not be the only approach, targeting the protected area expansion towards Gap0.1 threatened species, would strengthen the EU protected area network by maximising the ability to conserve biodiversity and prevent extinctions.

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