4.6 Article

Identification of Priority Forest Conservation Areas for Critically Endangered Lemur Species of Madagascar

Journal

LAND
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/land11091455

Keywords

biodiversity hotspot; pressure; protected area; fragmentation; habitat

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Forests in Madagascar are crucial for the conservation of endemic species, but they are rapidly diminishing due to unsustainable agricultural practices. This study used ecological and spatial criteria to identify priority areas for the conservation of critically endangered lemur species. By considering distribution areas, forest extension, human impacts, and conservation status, seven new sites were identified as important for protecting these species. Protecting these sites would not only contribute to meeting global biodiversity targets, but also ensure the survival of the studied lemur species.
Forests have extraordinary importance for the conservation of endemic species in Madagascar. However, they are disappearing fast due to a number of pressures, notably unsustainable agricultural practices leading to aggravated status of biodiversity. Here, we used a number of ecological and spatial criteria to identify and prioritise unprotected forest areas for the conservation of the eight critically endangered species of lemur belonging to the Lemuridae family in Madagascar. By combining spatial information layers on the distribution areas of the studied lemurs, forest extension and conservation status, and potential human impacts (such as roads, human settlements and agriculture lands), it was possible to identify the most appropriate sites for the expansion of the conservation areas of critically endangered lemur species. Seven new sites, totalling over 33,000 ha, were identified as priority sites for the protection of those species. All of them were adjacent to or inside (just one site) existing protected areas (PAs), which likely makes their protection both feasible and socioeconomically efficient by enlarging those PAs. Legally protecting these sites would not only take Madagascar one little step ahead for meeting oncoming global biodiversity targets for 2030 but could also make a substantial contribution to the mid-term survival of the studied lemur species.

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