4.3 Article

Defining and bridging the barriers to more effective conservation of island ecosystems: A practitioner's perspective

Journal

CONSERVATION SCIENCE AND PRACTICE
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/csp2.587

Keywords

conservation management; island ecosystems; National Coordination; Seychelles; Small Island Developing States; social survey; Western Indian Ocean

Funding

  1. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/L002612/1]

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The failure to achieve global biodiversity targets highlights the need for more effective biodiversity management and conservation efforts, which in turn requires a better understanding of current barriers to success. Island ecosystems are facing severe biodiversity loss, and in order to effectively protect them, barriers at organizational, national, and project levels need to be overcome.
The failure to meet global biodiversity targets clearly indicates the need for biodiversity management and conservation efforts to be more effective, and this in turn requires better understanding of the current barriers to success. Islands are known as biodiversity hotspots but nowhere has biodiversity loss been so acute as in island ecosystems. To identify the barriers to effective island ecosystem conservation, we conducted 32 semistructured interviews with conservation and management practitioners from island nations in the Western Indian Ocean region. Practitioners described 33 barriers to meeting their objectives under 12 overarching topics and suggested 14 solutions to these. Most barriers described by interviewees existed at organization level (55%), followed by national (24%) and site/project level (21%). Of the 33 barriers described by practitioners, the most commonly associated cause was limited capacity (23.5%), followed by lack of government coordination and limited resources (both 21.6%), lack of incentives (11.8%), poor leadership (11.7%), and finally interpersonal issues interfering with progress (9.8%). Most solutions centered around bridging capacity gaps. By defining these barriers, we can bring them forward for discussion and allocate resources and efforts to bridging them. Only by doing so can we increase the effectiveness of our management efforts and maximize our chances of achieving global biodiversity targets.

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