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Conservation organizations need to consider adaptive capacity: why local input matters

Conservation organizations need to consider adaptive capacity: why local input matters
Conservation organizations need to consider adaptive capacity: why local input matters
Conservation organizations are increasingly applying adaptive capacity assessments in response to escalating climate change impacts. These assessments are essential to identify climate risks to ecosystems, prioritize management interventions, maximize the effectiveness of conservation actions, and ensure conservation resources are allocated appropriately. Despite an extensive literature on the topic, there is little agreement on the most relevant factors needed to support local scale initiatives, and additional guidance is needed to clarify how adaptive capacity should be assessed. This paper discusses why adaptive capacity assessment represents a critical tool supporting conservation planning and management. It also evaluates key factors guiding conservation NGOs conducting these assessments in tropical island communities, and explores alternative priorities based on input from academic experts and key local stakeholders. Our results demonstrate that important differences exist between local stakeholders and non-local academic experts on key factors affecting adaptation and coping mechanisms. The exclusion of local community input affects the validity of adaptive capacity assessment findings, and has significant implications for the prioritization and effectiveness of conservation strategies and funding allocation.
adaptive capacity, climate vulnerability assessment, natural resource management
1755-263X
Mcleod, E.
85d7750f-582a-4174-a480-c1df65d99a38
Szuster, B.
084e418c-920f-4a53-a24f-cd03cee65890
Hinkel, J.
ad8c8187-dcca-42f5-84e0-75d30a1e7875
Tompkins, E.L.
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Marshall, N.
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Downing, T.
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Wongbusarakum, S.
cf68c10c-7498-4bb2-99fc-8b52d10ec044
Patwardhan, A.
b017b22f-c1ae-484c-ba6d-cdc23b8f2f46
Hamza, A.
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Anderson, C.
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Bharwani, S.
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Hansen, L.
c07afee9-a9d5-4d89-9703-2a603a23b8fe
Rubinoff, P.
88381304-cecc-4d03-82d1-b6acce3f4695
Mcleod, E.
85d7750f-582a-4174-a480-c1df65d99a38
Szuster, B.
084e418c-920f-4a53-a24f-cd03cee65890
Hinkel, J.
ad8c8187-dcca-42f5-84e0-75d30a1e7875
Tompkins, E.L.
a6116704-7140-4e37-bea1-2cbf39b138c3
Marshall, N.
660c93f8-88a8-4827-8992-f0affc35645a
Downing, T.
0ec55fc9-2961-4522-971e-44e49ad8059e
Wongbusarakum, S.
cf68c10c-7498-4bb2-99fc-8b52d10ec044
Patwardhan, A.
b017b22f-c1ae-484c-ba6d-cdc23b8f2f46
Hamza, A.
e01db444-653f-437d-9348-d044bbe44ef4
Anderson, C.
c3959f14-af62-42b4-a092-b56f30e9fe02
Bharwani, S.
4095752f-cb13-4d3d-9102-f7f800fda408
Hansen, L.
c07afee9-a9d5-4d89-9703-2a603a23b8fe
Rubinoff, P.
88381304-cecc-4d03-82d1-b6acce3f4695

Mcleod, E., Szuster, B., Hinkel, J., Tompkins, E.L., Marshall, N., Downing, T., Wongbusarakum, S., Patwardhan, A., Hamza, A., Anderson, C., Bharwani, S., Hansen, L. and Rubinoff, P. (2015) Conservation organizations need to consider adaptive capacity: why local input matters. Conservation Letters. (doi:10.1111/conl.12210).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Conservation organizations are increasingly applying adaptive capacity assessments in response to escalating climate change impacts. These assessments are essential to identify climate risks to ecosystems, prioritize management interventions, maximize the effectiveness of conservation actions, and ensure conservation resources are allocated appropriately. Despite an extensive literature on the topic, there is little agreement on the most relevant factors needed to support local scale initiatives, and additional guidance is needed to clarify how adaptive capacity should be assessed. This paper discusses why adaptive capacity assessment represents a critical tool supporting conservation planning and management. It also evaluates key factors guiding conservation NGOs conducting these assessments in tropical island communities, and explores alternative priorities based on input from academic experts and key local stakeholders. Our results demonstrate that important differences exist between local stakeholders and non-local academic experts on key factors affecting adaptation and coping mechanisms. The exclusion of local community input affects the validity of adaptive capacity assessment findings, and has significant implications for the prioritization and effectiveness of conservation strategies and funding allocation.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 5 October 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 November 2015
Keywords: adaptive capacity, climate vulnerability assessment, natural resource management
Organisations: Global Env Change & Earth Observation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 383960
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/383960
ISSN: 1755-263X
PURE UUID: 16b53aa1-dcd3-45b4-98f7-ec01b791299d
ORCID for E.L. Tompkins: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4825-9797

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 01 Dec 2015 13:38
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:39

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Contributors

Author: E. Mcleod
Author: B. Szuster
Author: J. Hinkel
Author: E.L. Tompkins ORCID iD
Author: N. Marshall
Author: T. Downing
Author: S. Wongbusarakum
Author: A. Patwardhan
Author: A. Hamza
Author: C. Anderson
Author: S. Bharwani
Author: L. Hansen
Author: P. Rubinoff

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