Literature DB >> 32056252

Mapping legal authority for terrestrial conservation corridors along streams.

Amanda T Stahl1, Alexander K Fremier1, Barbara A Cosens2.   

Abstract

Wildlife corridors aim to promote species' persistence by connecting habitat patches across fragmented landscapes. Their implementation is limited by patterns of land ownership and complicated by differences in the jurisdictional and regulatory authorities under which lands are managed. Terrestrial corridor conservation requires coordination across jurisdictions and sectors subject to site-specific overlapping sources of legal authority. Mapping spatial patterns of legal authority concurrent with habitat condition can illustrate opportunities to build or leverage capacity for connectivity conservation. Streamside areas provide pragmatic opportunities to leverage existing policy mechanisms for riverine and terrestrial habitat connectivity across boundaries. Conservation planners and practitioners can make use of these opportunities by harmonizing actions for multiple conservation outcomes. We formulated an integrative, data-driven method for mapping multiple sources of legal authority weighted by capacity for coordinating terrestrial habitat conservation along streams. We generated a map of capacity to coordinate streamside corridor protections across a wildlife habitat gap to demonstrate this approach. We combined values representing coordination capacity and naturalness to generate an integrated legal-ecological resistance map for connectivity modeling. We then computed least-cost corridors across the integrated map, masking the terrestrial landscape to focus on streamside areas. Streamside least-cost corridors in the integrated, local-scale model diverged (∼25 km) from national-scale least-cost corridors based on naturalness. Spatial categories comparing legal- and naturalness-based resistance values by stream reach highlighted potential locations for building or leveraging existing capacity through spatial coordination of policy mechanisms or restoration actions. Agencies or nongovernmental organizations intending to restore or maintain habitat connectivity across fragmented landscapes can use this approach to inform spatial prioritization and build coordination capacity. Article impact statement: Combined mapping of legal authority and habitat condition reveals capacity to coordinate actions along streams for clean water and wildlife.
© 2020 The Authors. Conservation Biology published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Society for Conservation Biology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  conectividad; connectivity; corredores de fauna; fragmentación del paisaje; hábitat ribereño; land-use planning; landscape fragmentation; law; ley; planeación del uso de suelo; private lands; protected areas; riparian habitat; tierras privadas; wildlife corridors; áreas protegidas; 保护地; 土地利用规划; 景观破碎化; 河岸生境; 法律; 私有土地; 连接度; 野生动物廊道

Year:  2020        PMID: 32056252     DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13484

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Conserv Biol        ISSN: 0888-8892            Impact factor:   6.560


  2 in total

1.  Limnological response from high-altitude wetlands to the water supply in the Andean Altiplano.

Authors:  Ignacio García-Sanz; Inger Heine-Fuster; José A Luque; Héctor Pizarro; Rodrigo Castillo; Matías Pailahual; Manuel Prieto; Pablo Pérez-Portilla; Adriana Aránguiz-Acuña
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-04-08       Impact factor: 4.379

2.  Governing Ecological Connectivity in Cross-Scale Dependent Systems.

Authors:  Annika T H Keeley; Alexander K Fremier; Pascale A L Goertler; Patrick R Huber; Anna M Sturrock; Samuel M Bashevkin; Blake A Barbaree; J Letitia Grenier; Thomas E Dilts; Melanie Gogol-Prokurat; Denise D Colombano; Eva E Bush; Angela Laws; John A Gallo; Mathias Kondolf; Amanda T Stahl
Journal:  Bioscience       Date:  2022-01-25       Impact factor: 8.589

  2 in total

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