4.8 Article

Effectiveness of 20 years of conservation investments in protecting orangutans

期刊

CURRENT BIOLOGY
卷 32, 期 8, 页码 1754-+

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.02.051

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资金

  1. Darwin Initiative for the Survival of Species (DEFRA, UK) [09/016]
  2. Nacey Maggioncalda Foundation
  3. University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh
  4. United States Fish and Wildlife Service
  5. Orangutan Foundation of UK
  6. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  7. Leakey Foundation
  8. Disney Conservation Fund
  9. Direktorat Perguruan Tinggi Republik Indonesia
  10. Sabah Biodiversity Council [JKM/MBS.1000-2/2 JLD.6 (79)]
  11. Department of Aviation Malaysia [UMS/IBTP7.2/800]
  12. Sabah Forestry Department, UNDP-GEF

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Conservation strategies are often not evaluated systematically, which leads to a lack of transparency and inefficiency in resource deployment. This study used a spatiotemporal framework to evaluate conservation investments in orangutan conservation. The findings show that habitat protection, patrolling, and public outreach are the most effective strategies for maintaining orangutan populations, with different benefits depending on the region and conservation activities. The study highlights the importance of understanding the relationship between conservation investments and outcomes, and provides guidance for more effective biodiversity conservation.
Conservation strategies are rarely systematically evaluated, which reduces transparency, hinders the costeffective deployment of resources, and hides what works best in different contexts. Using data on the iconic and critically endangered orangutan (Pongo spp.), we developed a novel spatiotemporal framework for evaluating conservation investments. We show that around USD 1 billion was invested between 2000 and 2019 into orangutan conservation by governments, nongovernmental organizations, companies, and communities. Broken down by allocation to different conservation strategies, we find that habitat protection, patrolling, and public outreach had the greatest return on investment for maintaining orangutan populations. Given the variability in threats, land-use opportunity costs, and baseline remunerations in different regions, there were differential benefits per dollar invested across conservation activities and regions. We show that although challenging from a data and analysis perspective, it is possible to fully understand the relationships between conservation investments and outcomes and the external factors that influence these outcomes. Such analyses can provide improved guidance toward a more effective biodiversity conservation. Insights into the spatiotemporal interplays between the costs and benefits driving effectiveness can inform decisions about the most suitable orangutan conservation strategies for halting population declines. Although our study focuses on the three extant orangutan species of Sumatra and Borneo, our findings have broad application for evidence-based conservation science and practice worldwide.

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