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A simple landscape design framework for biodiversity conservation

A simple landscape design framework for biodiversity conservation
A simple landscape design framework for biodiversity conservation
Local government planning agencies play an important role in conserving biodiversity in human-altered landscapes. Such agencies frequently have a limited knowledge of wildlife biology and few resources to carry out research, and therefore require simple, practical guidelines for biodiversity conservation. We propose a landscape design framework for biodiversity conservation that is sequential, prescriptive, and supported by current landscape ecological science. Unlike existing guidelines, our framework can be implemented in any given landscape using only land cover data and it explicitly considers constraints on land use planning. The steps of our framework, in the order in which they should be implemented are: (1) select land cover data and decide which land cover classes constitute unaltered or altered land covers; (2) list the constraints on land use planning (e.g., economic, social) that exist for the landscape; (3) maximize the total amount and diversity of unaltered land cover, especially near water; (4) minimize human disturbance within altered land cover, especially near water; and (5) aggregate altered land covers associated with high-intensity land uses, especially away from water. We illustrate the utility of our approach by applying it to a hypothetical landscape and comparing the outcome to those from the application of traditional ecological guidelines to inform land use planning.
human-dominated landscapes, land use and land cover change, landscape ecology, land use planning, integrated landscape management
0169-2046
13-27
Gagné, Sara A.
3d23865d-feda-4001-9437-5eebd01b5dd3
Eigenbrod, Felix
43efc6ae-b129-45a2-8a34-e489b5f05827
Bert, Daniel G.
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Cunnington, Glenn M.
17764171-cc68-4090-9a75-2688e4d8a5ea
Olson, Leif T.
3995b38a-327a-4db4-97eb-300ea01fc2f5
Smith, Adam C.
1b31b531-eb42-406f-b2a5-39a2944d5074
Fahrig, Lenore
0b5abbaa-cfb8-437a-bf31-be3d4ad721e0
Gagné, Sara A.
3d23865d-feda-4001-9437-5eebd01b5dd3
Eigenbrod, Felix
43efc6ae-b129-45a2-8a34-e489b5f05827
Bert, Daniel G.
6b8aca8e-2f6a-4b41-bb00-3538e029251f
Cunnington, Glenn M.
17764171-cc68-4090-9a75-2688e4d8a5ea
Olson, Leif T.
3995b38a-327a-4db4-97eb-300ea01fc2f5
Smith, Adam C.
1b31b531-eb42-406f-b2a5-39a2944d5074
Fahrig, Lenore
0b5abbaa-cfb8-437a-bf31-be3d4ad721e0

Gagné, Sara A., Eigenbrod, Felix, Bert, Daniel G., Cunnington, Glenn M., Olson, Leif T., Smith, Adam C. and Fahrig, Lenore (2015) A simple landscape design framework for biodiversity conservation. Landscape and Urban Planning, 136, 13-27. (doi:10.1016/j.landurbplan.2014.11.006).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Local government planning agencies play an important role in conserving biodiversity in human-altered landscapes. Such agencies frequently have a limited knowledge of wildlife biology and few resources to carry out research, and therefore require simple, practical guidelines for biodiversity conservation. We propose a landscape design framework for biodiversity conservation that is sequential, prescriptive, and supported by current landscape ecological science. Unlike existing guidelines, our framework can be implemented in any given landscape using only land cover data and it explicitly considers constraints on land use planning. The steps of our framework, in the order in which they should be implemented are: (1) select land cover data and decide which land cover classes constitute unaltered or altered land covers; (2) list the constraints on land use planning (e.g., economic, social) that exist for the landscape; (3) maximize the total amount and diversity of unaltered land cover, especially near water; (4) minimize human disturbance within altered land cover, especially near water; and (5) aggregate altered land covers associated with high-intensity land uses, especially away from water. We illustrate the utility of our approach by applying it to a hypothetical landscape and comparing the outcome to those from the application of traditional ecological guidelines to inform land use planning.

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Accepted/In Press date: 11 November 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 December 2014
Published date: 2015
Keywords: human-dominated landscapes, land use and land cover change, landscape ecology, land use planning, integrated landscape management
Organisations: Faculty of Natural and Environmental Sciences, Centre for Biological Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 377097
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/377097
ISSN: 0169-2046
PURE UUID: 01b7e959-4c45-4a83-a8a3-2b9cdcc8aa29
ORCID for Felix Eigenbrod: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8982-824X

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Date deposited: 19 May 2015 13:18
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:36

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Contributors

Author: Sara A. Gagné
Author: Felix Eigenbrod ORCID iD
Author: Daniel G. Bert
Author: Glenn M. Cunnington
Author: Leif T. Olson
Author: Adam C. Smith
Author: Lenore Fahrig

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