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The Capacity of Australia's Protected‐Area System to Represent Threatened Species
Authors:JAMES EM WATSON  MEGAN C EVANS  JOSIE CARWARDINE  RICHARD A FULLER  LIANA N JOSEPH  DAN B SEGAN  MARTIN FJ TAYLOR  RJ FENSHAM  HUGH P POSSINGHAM
Institution:1. The University of Queensland, The Ecology Centre, Queensland 4072, Australia;2. CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems, St. Lucia, Queensland 4072, Australia;3. WWF‐Australia, Ground Level, 129 Margaret Street, Brisbane, Queensland 4000, Australia;4. Queensland Herbarium, Environmental Protection Agency, Mt. Coot‐Tha Road, Brisbane, Queensland 4068, Australia
Abstract:Abstract: The acquisition or designation of new protected areas is usually based on criteria for representation of different ecosystems or land‐cover classes, and it is unclear how wellthreatened species are conserved within protected‐area networks. Here, we assessed how Australia's terrestrial protected‐area system (89 million ha, 11.6% of the continent) overlaps with the geographic distributions of threatened species and compared this overlap against a model that randomly placed protected areas across the continent and a spatially efficient model that placed protected areas across the continent to maximize threatened species’ representation within the protected‐area estate. We defined the minimum area needed to conserve each species on the basis of the species’ range size. We found that although the current configuration of protected areas met targets for representation of a given percentage of species’ ranges better than a random selection of areas, 166 (12.6%) threatened species occurred entirely outside protected areas and target levels of protection were met for only 259 (19.6%) species. Critically endangered species were among those with the least protection; 12 (21.1%) species occurred entirely outside protected areas. Reptiles and plants were the most poorly represented taxonomic groups, and amphibians the best represented. Spatial prioritization analyses revealed that an efficient protected‐area system of the same size as the current protected‐area system (11.6% of the area of Australia) could meet representation targets for 1272 (93.3%) threatened species. Moreover, the results of these prioritization analyses showed that by protecting 17.8% of Australia, all threatened species could reach target levels of representation, assuming all current protected areas are retained. Although this amount of area theoretically could be protected, existing land uses and the finite resources available for conservation mean land acquisition may not be possible or even effective for the recovery of threatened species. The optimal use of resources must balance acquisition of new protected areas, where processes that threaten native species are mitigated by the change in ownership or on‐ground management jurisdiction, and management of threatened species inside and outside the existing protected‐area system.
Keywords:adequacy  Australia  protected areas  range size  representation  spatial prioritization  threatened species  adecuació  n  Australia  á  reas protegidas  especies amenazadas  priorizació  n espacial  representació  n  tamañ  o de á  rea de distribució  n
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