Abstract

Land use change in rangeland ecosystems is pervasive throughout the western United States with widespread ecological, social and economic implications. In California, rangeland habitats have high biodiversity value, provide significant habitat connectivity and form the foundation for a number of ecosystem services. To comprehensively assess the conservation status of these habitats, we analyzed the extent and drivers of habitat loss and the degree of protection against future loss across a 13.5 M ha study area in California. We analyzed rangeland conversion between 1984 and 2008 using time series GIS data and classified resulting land uses with aerial imagery. In total, over 195,000 hectares of rangeland habitats were converted during this period. The majority of conversions were to residential and associated commercial development (49% of the area converted), but agricultural intensification was surprisingly extensive and diverse (40% across six categories). Voluntary enrollment in an agricultural tax incentive program provided widespread protection from residential and commercial conversions across 37% of the remaining rangeland habitat extent (7.5 M ha), though this program did not protect rangeland from conversion to more intensive agricultural uses. Additionally, 24% of the remaining rangeland was protected by private conservation organizations or public agencies through land or easement ownership while 38% had no protection status at all. By developing a spatial method to analyze the drivers of loss and patterns of protection, this study demonstrates a novel approach to prioritize conservation strategies and implementation locations to avert habitat conversion. We propose that this approach can be used in other ecosystem types, and can serve as a regional conservation baseline assessment to focus strategies to effect widespread, cost-effective conservation solutions.

Highlights

  • The conversion of habitat from a natural state to developed human uses has fundamentally altered both the spatial configuration and function of ecosystems worldwide [1]

  • High levels of habitat loss are especially detrimental for biodiversity in Mediterranean regions of the world that have some of the highest population densities of all global biodiversity hotspots [9]

  • The grazing land category was used in this study to assess conversion patterns and is defined as ‘‘land on which the existing vegetation is suited to the grazing of livestock’’

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The conversion of habitat from a natural state to developed human uses has fundamentally altered both the spatial configuration and function of ecosystems worldwide [1]. The primary global biomes that support extensive rangelands– 1) Temperate grasslands, savannas and shrublands; and 2) Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub– have experienced widespread conversion to anthropogenic land uses (45.8%, 41.4% converted respectively) and have the lowest proportion of legal conservation protection among all biomes (4.6%, 5.0% respectively) [8]. This habitat conversion is driven by population growth and associated residential and commercial development, as well as agricultural production. High levels of habitat loss are especially detrimental for biodiversity in Mediterranean regions of the world that have some of the highest population densities of all global biodiversity hotspots [9]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call