Literature DB >> 16215647

Even conservation rules are made to be broken: implications for biodiversity.

Paul Robbins1, Kendra McSweeney, Thomas Waite, Jennifer Rice.   

Abstract

Despite efforts to enclose and control conservation zones around the world, direct human impacts in conservation areas continue, often resulting from clandestine violations of conservation rules through outright poaching, strategic agricultural encroachment, or noncompliance. Nevertheless, next to nothing is actually known about the spatially and temporally explicit patterns of anthropogenic disturbance resulting from such noncompliance. This article reviews current understandings of ecological disturbance and conservation noncompliance, concluding that differing forms of noncompliance hold differing implications for diversity. The authors suggest that forms of anthropogenic patchy disturbance resulting from violation may maintain, if not enhance, floral diversity. They therefore argue for extended empirical investigation of such activities and call for conservation biologists to work with social scientists to assess this conservation reality by analyzing how and when incomplete enforcement and rule-breaking drive ecological change.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16215647     DOI: 10.1007/s00267-005-0009-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Manage        ISSN: 0364-152X            Impact factor:   3.266


  9 in total

1.  Biodiversity hotspots for conservation priorities.

Authors:  N Myers; R A Mittermeier; C G Mittermeier; G A da Fonseca; J Kent
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2000-02-24       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  Strategy Space and the Disturbance Spectrum: A Life-History Model for Tree Species Coexistence.

Authors:  Craig Loehle
Journal:  Am Nat       Date:  2000-07       Impact factor: 3.926

3.  Spatial scale dictates the productivity-biodiversity relationship.

Authors:  Jonathan M Chase; Mathew A Leibold
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2002-03-28       Impact factor: 49.962

4.  Conservation biology: openness in management.

Authors:  William J Sutherland
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2002-08-22       Impact factor: 49.962

5.  Extinction rates under nonrandom patterns of habitat loss.

Authors:  Eric W Seabloom; Andy P Dobson; David M Stoms
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2002-08-12       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Lowland forest loss in protected areas of Indonesian Borneo.

Authors:  L M Curran; S N Trigg; A K McDonald; D Astiani; Y M Hardiono; P Siregar; I Caniago; E Kasischke
Journal:  Science       Date:  2004-02-13       Impact factor: 47.728

Review 7.  Biodiversity conservation and the eradication of poverty.

Authors:  William M Adams; Ros Aveling; Dan Brockington; Barney Dickson; Jo Elliott; Jon Hutton; Dilys Roe; Bhaskar Vira; William Wolmer
Journal:  Science       Date:  2004-11-12       Impact factor: 47.728

8.  Diversity in tropical rain forests and coral reefs.

Authors:  J H Connell
Journal:  Science       Date:  1978-03-24       Impact factor: 47.728

9.  Plant diversity in tropical forests: a review of mechanisms of species coexistence.

Authors:  Joseph S Wright
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2002-01-01       Impact factor: 3.225

  9 in total
  2 in total

1.  A dynamic simulation model of land-use, population, and rural livelihoods in the Central Rift Valley of Ethiopia.

Authors:  Efrem Garedew; Mats Sandewall; Ulf Soderberg
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2011-11-23       Impact factor: 3.266

2.  Enforcement authority and vegetation change at Kumbhalgarh wildlife sanctuary, Rajasthan, India.

Authors:  Paul F Robbins; Anil K Chhangani; Jennifer Rice; Erika Trigosa; S M Mohnot
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2007-07-18       Impact factor: 3.266

  2 in total

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