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Toward Best Management Practices for Ecological Corridors

Journal

LAND
Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/land10020140

Keywords

ecological corridors; conservation corridors; wildlife; management; conservation biology; urban/agro-ecology

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Ecological corridors are essential for maintaining biodiversity and adapting to climate change. This document serves as a guide for managers to apply scientific principles to corridor management, focusing on the history, impacts, and best practices of managing linear barriers. It also addresses the management of corridors in riparian areas, urban environments, and agricultural lands. Knowledge gaps in corridor management are identified for further research.
Ecological corridors are one of the best, and possibly only viable, management tools to maintain biodiversity at large scales and to allow species, and ecological processes, to track climate change. This document has been assembled as a summary of the best available information about managing these systems. Our aim with this paper is to provide managers with a convenient guidance document and tool to assist in applying scientific management principles to management of corridors. We do not cover issues related to corridor design or political buy in, but focus on how a corridor should be managed once it has been established. The first part of our paper outlines the history and value of ecological corridors. We next describe our methodologies for developing this guidance document. We then summarize the information about the impacts of linear features on corridors and strategies for dealing with them-specifically, we focus on the effects of roads, canals, security fences, and transmission lines. Following the description of effects, we provide a summary of the best practices for managing the impacts of linear barriers. Globally, many corridors are established in the flood plains of stream and rivers and occur in riparian areas associated with surface waters. Therefore, we next provide guidance on how to manage corridors that occur in riparian areas. We then segue into corridors and the urban/suburban environment, and summarize strategies for dealing with urban development within corridors. The final major anthropic land use that may affect corridor management is cultivation and grazing agriculture. We end this review by identifying gaps in knowledge pertaining to how best to manage corridors.

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