Managing Protected Areas Under Climate Change: Challenges and Priorities |
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Authors: | Sven Rannow Nicholas A. Macgregor Juliane Albrecht Humphrey Q. P. Crick Michael Förster Stefan Heiland Georg Janauer Mike D. Morecroft Marco Neubert Anca Sarbu Jadwiga Sienkiewicz |
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Affiliation: | 1. Biosphere Reserve River Landscape Elbe-Brandenburg, Neuhausstra?e 9, Rühst?dt, 19322, Germany 2. Natural England, Nobel House, 17 Smith Square, London, SW1P 3JR, UK 3. Leibniz Institute of Ecological Urban and Regional Development, Weberplatz 1, 01217, Dresden, Germany 4. Natural England, Eastbrook, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge, CB2 8DR, UK 5. Geoinformation in Environmental Planning Lab, Technische Universit?t Berlin, Sekr. EB 5, Str. d. 17. Juni 145, 10623, Berlin, Germany 6. Department of Landscape Planning and Development, Technische Universit?t Berlin, Sekr. EB 5, Str. d. 17. Juni 145, 10623, Berlin, Germany 7. Department of Limnology, University of Vienna, Althanstra?e 14, 1091, Vienna, Austria 8. Natural England, Block B, Whittington Road, Worcester, WR5 2LQ, UK 9. Department of Botany-Microbiology, University of Bucharest, Aleea Portocalelor 1-3, 060101, Bucharest, Romania 10. Environmental Protection Institute, Krucza 5/11, 00-548, Warsaw, Poland
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Abstract: | The implementation of adaptation actions in local conservation management is a new and complex task with multiple facets, influenced by factors differing from site to site. A transdisciplinary perspective is therefore required to identify and implement effective solutions. To address this, the International Conference on Managing Protected Areas under Climate Change brought together international scientists, conservation managers, and decision-makers to discuss current experiences with local adaptation of conservation management. This paper summarizes the main issues for implementing adaptation that emerged from the conference. These include a series of conclusions and recommendations on monitoring, sensitivity assessment, current and future management practices, and legal and policy aspects. A range of spatial and temporal scales must be considered in the implementation of climate-adapted management. The adaptation process must be area-specific and consider the ecosystem and the social and economic conditions within and beyond protected area boundaries. However, a strategic overview is also needed: management at each site should be informed by conservation priorities and likely impacts of climate change at regional or even wider scales. Acting across these levels will be a long and continuous process, requiring coordination with actors outside the “traditional” conservation sector. To achieve this, a range of research, communication, and policy/legal actions is required. We identify a series of important actions that need to be taken at different scales to enable managers of protected sites to adapt successfully to a changing climate. |
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