Change versus stability: are protected areas particularly pressured by global land cover change?
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Electronic versions
Documents
- 2019 s10980-019-00918-4
Final published version, 2.15 MB, PDF document
Licence: CC BY Show licence
DOI
Context
Land cover change is a global multi-scale process affecting ecosystems, with potential implications for ecological processes and for the biological communities that support them. Land cover changes are especially relevant for protected areas where long-term ecosystem stability is a critical aspect of protecting and maintaining high levels of biodiversity and ecosystem functions.
Objectives
To understand the extent of land cover change impact on global ecosystem stability of protected areas across time and space.
Methods
Here we analysed 23 years of global spatial and temporal distribution of land cover change its occurrence within protected areas. We investigated whether higher land cover change rates occurred inside or outside protected areas, identified the main type of changes, and their distribution by UN region.
Results
Our results show that from 1992 to 2015, 4.89% of the world’s land surface changed from one land cover to another, with 97.9% of this change persisting until the end of the time period. We found that regions with higher land cover change, tend to have a higher incidence of change close to protected areas, suggesting a spillover effect on these areas. Also, the proportion of change inside and outside protected areas varied considerably across UN Regions.
Conclusions
Our results suggest that to reach current global conservation targets, it is not enough to increase the targets of protected area coverage. Instead, governments and conservation management agencies should account for regional specificities, and pay attention to the territories surrounding protected areas to develop strategies to reduce spillover effects.
Land cover change is a global multi-scale process affecting ecosystems, with potential implications for ecological processes and for the biological communities that support them. Land cover changes are especially relevant for protected areas where long-term ecosystem stability is a critical aspect of protecting and maintaining high levels of biodiversity and ecosystem functions.
Objectives
To understand the extent of land cover change impact on global ecosystem stability of protected areas across time and space.
Methods
Here we analysed 23 years of global spatial and temporal distribution of land cover change its occurrence within protected areas. We investigated whether higher land cover change rates occurred inside or outside protected areas, identified the main type of changes, and their distribution by UN region.
Results
Our results show that from 1992 to 2015, 4.89% of the world’s land surface changed from one land cover to another, with 97.9% of this change persisting until the end of the time period. We found that regions with higher land cover change, tend to have a higher incidence of change close to protected areas, suggesting a spillover effect on these areas. Also, the proportion of change inside and outside protected areas varied considerably across UN Regions.
Conclusions
Our results suggest that to reach current global conservation targets, it is not enough to increase the targets of protected area coverage. Instead, governments and conservation management agencies should account for regional specificities, and pay attention to the territories surrounding protected areas to develop strategies to reduce spillover effects.
Keywords
- Ecosystem change, Global, Land degradation, Landscape impacts, Spillover effects
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 2779-2790 |
Journal | Landscape Ecology |
Volume | 34 |
Issue number | 12 |
Early online date | 18 Oct 2019 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Dec 2019 |
Total downloads
No data available