| Literature DB >> 21957458 |
Lissa M Barr1, Robert L Pressey, Richard A Fuller, Daniel B Segan, Eve McDonald-Madden, Hugh P Possingham.
Abstract
Protected areas are effective at stopping biodiversity loss, but their placement is constrained by the needs of people. Consequently protected areas are often biased toward areas that are unattractive for other human uses. Current reporting metrics that emphasise the total area protected do not account for this bias. To address this problem we propose that the distribution of protected areas be evaluated with an economic metric used to quantify inequality in income--the Gini coefficient. Using a modified version of this measure we discover that 73% of countries have inequitably protected their biodiversity and that common measures of protected area coverage do not adequately reveal this bias. Used in combination with total percentage protection, the Gini coefficient will improve the effectiveness of reporting on the growth of protected area coverage, paving the way for better representation of the world's biodiversity.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21957458 PMCID: PMC3177831 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0024707
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Four measures of protected area coverage in 83 countries analysed.
a) total percentage of land protected, b) mean percentage protection of ecoregions, c) percentage of ecoregions with at least 10% protection, d) protection equality. We divided all countries into quartiles for each measure and assigned colours to each quartile: green = highest quartile, yellow = second highest quartile, orange = second lowest quartile, red = lowest quartile.