The geography of high-value biodiversity areas for terrestrial vertebrates in Western Europe and their coverage by protected area networks
Authors
Rey Benayas, José MaríaIdentifiers
Permanent link (URI): http://hdl.handle.net/10017/21421DOI: 10.5194/we-12-65-2012
ISSN: 2193-3081
Publisher
Copernicus Publications
Date
2012Funders
This research was supported by the
Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (grants CGL2010-
18312 to JMRB, and CGL2010-22119 to MAR), and the
Madrid Government REMEDINAL project (S2009AMB-1783).
M. J. T. Assunc¸ao-Albuquerque was supported by the Brazil- ˜
ian Ministry of Education, through CAPES (Coordenac¸ao de ˜
Aperfeic¸oamento de Pessoal de N´ıvel Superior) Doctorate
scholarship and FSA was supported by BIOTREE-net-project
funded by BBVA Foundation. We are indebted to two anonymous
reviewers that greatly improved a former version of this manuscript
Bibliographic citation
Web Ecology, 2012, v. 12, p. 65-73
Keywords
Vertebrados
Europa
Vertebrates
Europe
Project
CGL2010-22119 (Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación)
CGL2010-18312 (Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación)
S2009/AMB-1783/REMEDINAL (Comunidad de Madrid)
Document type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Version
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Publisher's version
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/we-12-65-2012Rights
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España
Access rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Abstract
We identified high-value biodiversity areas (HVBAs) of terrestrial vertebrates according to a combined index of biodiversity (CBI) for each major taxon and a standardized biodiversity index (SBI) for all taxa in 2195 cells of 50 × 50 km in Western Europe to evaluate whether these areas are included in the current protected area networks. The World Database on Protected Areas (WDPA) and NATURA 2000 protected area network were used to assess the protected area cover in HVBAs. WDPA and NATURA 2000 were geographically quite complementary as WDPA is more densely represented in Central and Northern Europe and NATURA 2000 in the Mediterranean basin. A total of 729 cells were identified as HVBAs. From the total of these HVBA areas, NATURA 2000 network was present in more cells (660) than the WDPA network (584 cells). The sum of protected land percentages across all the HVBA cells was 28.8%. The identified HVBA cells according to the SBI included 603 or 78.2% of all vertebrate species in the study region, whereas the identified HVBA cells according to the SBI for individual taxa included 47 (90.4%) species of amphibians, 79 (74.5%) of reptiles, 417 (88.5%) of birds, and 130 (91.5%) of mammals. However, neither network was present in 7 or 3% of the identified HVBA cells. Thus, we recommend expanding protected areas in Europe to fill this gap and improve coverage of vertebrate species to strengthen biodiversity conservation.
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Geography_high-value_WE_2012.pdf | 1.048Mb |
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