4.6 Article

Understanding the effects of different social data on selecting priority conservation areas

期刊

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
卷 31, 期 6, 页码 1439-1449

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.12947

关键词

conservation opportunity; conservation planning; cost-effective decisions; land-use preferences; social values; spatial prioritization; zonation

资金

  1. School of Geography, Planning and Environmental Management at the University of Queensland
  2. Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Conservation success is contingent on assessing social and environmental factors so that cost-effective implementation of strategies and actions can be placed in a broad social-ecological context. Until now, the focus has been on how to include spatially explicit social data in conservation planning, whereas the value of different kinds of social data has received limited attention. In a regional systematic conservation planning case study in Australia, we examined the spatial concurrence of a range of spatially explicit social values and land-use preferences collected using a public participation geographic information system and biological data. We used Zonation to integrate the social data with the biological data in a series of spatial-prioritization scenarios to determine the effect of the different types of social data on spatial prioritization compared with biological data alone. The type of social data (i.e., conservation opportunities or constraints) significantly affected spatial prioritization outcomes. The integration of social values and land-use preferences under different scenarios was highly variable and generated spatial prioritizations 1.2-51% different from those based on biological data alone. The inclusion of conservation-compatible values and preferences added relatively few new areas to conservation priorities, whereas including noncompatible economic values and development preferences as costs significantly changed conservation priority areas (48.2% and 47.4%, respectively). Based on our results, a multifaceted conservation prioritization approach that combines spatially explicit social data with biological data can help conservation planners identify the type of social data to collect for more effective and feasible conservation actions.

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