Abstract

AbstractMuch of conservation planning has focused on how we should prioritize areas for protection based on biodiversity and cost, but less is known about how we should prioritize areas based upon the level of threat they face. We discuss two opposing threat prioritization strategies: frontier conservation (prioritizing high‐threat areas) and wilderness conservation (prioritizing low‐threat areas). Using a temporally explicit model, we demonstrate that the best strategy depends on a variety of factors, including protection costs, heterogeneity in biodiversity, biodiversity–area relationships, the rate of biodiversity recovery, the rate of change in threats through time, and the timeframe within which we measure conservation outcomes. By quantitatively comparing the impact of these strategies, we aim to shift the debate away from a simple dichotomy of frontier versus wilderness, toward an understanding of the context‐specific benefits of each option, and a discussion of how threat combines with other factors to determine spatial conservation priorities.

Highlights

  • Systematic conservation planning aims to protect biodiversity features from threats that might compromise their persistence, so that overall biodiversity value is maximized within a planning region (Margules & Pressey, 2000)

  • Our goal is to explore the range of factors that might influence the relative impact of frontier and wilderness conservation strategies

  • For the two-patch system, we quantitatively defined a set of key factors that affect conservation decisions, each of which is commonly discussed in the context of the frontier/wilderness debate (Spring et al, 2007; Visconti et al, 2010)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Systematic conservation planning aims to protect biodiversity features from threats that might compromise their persistence, so that overall biodiversity value is maximized within a planning region (Margules & Pressey, 2000). Our goal is to explore the range of factors (e.g., threats, costs, and biodiversity values) that might influence the relative impact of frontier and wilderness conservation strategies. We present a theoretical planning landscape in which it is possible to systematically vary and control a range of factors Our aim with this general model is not to provide specific recommendations for particular conservation landscapes, but instead to offer a clearer picture of how multiple factors interact to determine the relative impact of wilderness and frontier strategies. We hope to progress the debate beyond a simple dichotomy, toward an understanding of the conditions that determine which strategy delivers the greatest impacts

GENERAL CONSERVATION MODEL
Model description
Analyses
FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE THE WILDERNESS VERSUS FRONTIER DECISION
Aspects of biodiversity value
The rate of biodiversity recovery
Temporal change in threats
Timeframe to reach conservation objectives
Findings
CONCLUSION
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