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Provedor de dados:  Ecology and Society
País:  Canada
Título:  Lattice-work corridors for climate change: a conceptual framework for biodiversity conservation and social-ecological resilience in a tropical elevational gradient
Autores:  Townsend, Patricia A; University of Washington; ptownsen@uw.edu
Masters, Karen L; Council on International Educational Exchange; KMasters@ciee.org
Data:  2015-04-06
Ano:  2015
Palavras-chave:  Buffer capacity
Climate adaptation
Community involvement
Conservation incentives
Costa Rica
Environmental services payments
Forest landscape restoration
Habitat priority-setting
Landscape connectivity
Reforestation
Resilient ecosystems
Resilient livelihoods
Riparian zones
Tropical mountain ecosystems
Resumo:  Rapid climate change poses complex challenges for conservation, especially in tropical developing countries where biodiversity is high while financial and technical resources are limited. The complexity is heightened by uncertainty in predicted effects, both for ecological systems and human communities that depend heavily on natural resource extraction and use. Effective conservation plans and measures must be inexpensive, fast-acting, and able to increase the resilience of both the ecosystem and the social-ecological system. We present conservation practitioners with a framework that strategically integrates climate change planning into connectivity measures for tropical mountain ecosystems in Costa Rica. We propose a strategy for doubling the amount of habitat currently protected in riparian corridors using measures that are relatively low cost and fast-acting, and will employ and expand human capital. We argue that habitat connectivity must be enhanced along latitudinal gradients, but also within the same elevational bands, via a lattice-work corridor system. This is needed to facilitate range shifts for mobile species and evolutionary adaptation for less mobile species. We think that conservation measures within the elevational bands must include conservation-friendly land uses that improve current and future human livelihoods under dynamic conditions. Key components include community involvement, habitat priority-setting, forest landscape restoration, and environmental services payments. Our approach is fundamentally adaptive in that the conservation measures employed are informed by on-the-ground successes and failures and modified accordingly, but are relatively low risk and fast-acting. Our proposal, if implemented, would satisfy tenets of climate-smart conservation, improve the resilience of human and ecological communities, and be a model for other locations facing similar challenges.
Tipo:  Peer-Reviewed Insight
Idioma:  Inglês
Identificador:  vol20/iss2/art1/
Editor:  Resilience Alliance
Formato:  text/html application/pdf
Fonte:  Ecology and Society; Vol. 20, No. 2 (2015)
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