The current state-of-play - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The current state-of-play

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The current state-of-play protected areas Existing protected areas are not sufficiently comprehensive or adequate to achieve conservation targets. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The current state-of-play


1
The current state-of-play protected areas
  • Existing protected areas are not sufficiently
    comprehensive or adequate to achieve conservation
    targets.
  • The degraded state of many rivers poses a
    practical barrier to effective implementation of
    conservation targets through the designation of
    protected areas.
  • Restoration of some currently degraded ecosystems
    will be required to complement existing reserves.
  • These bits in between are rarely considered in
    conservation planning

2
Aquatic ecosystem restoration.
  • Most project small-scale, and rarely integrated
    with conservation programs to achieve specific
    biodiversity targets.
  • Artificial distinction between conservation
    restoration
  • Conservation biology and reserve selection
    principles a useful means of prioritising
    restoration activities, but rarely applied in
    aquatic ecosystems.

3
Principles for ecosystem restoration
  • To be effective restoration must target the
    ecosystem level - the river and its surrounding
    catchment, and be based around well defined
    objectives.
  • Lateral and longitudinal connectivity must be
    considered, both in restoring key processes and
    protecting restored areas from external threats.
  • hydrologic alteration a major threat in most
    rivers
  • Prioritisation should also consider
    metapopulation dynamics, redundancy, otogenetic
    habitat needs

4
Summary
  • Restoration of degraded rivers provides a means
    of integrating protected area management and the
    bits in between to achieve biodiversity targets
    and maintain ecosystem structure function
  • Protected areas, their management, and associated
    objectives frequently treated separately from
    restoration programs
  • Disciplinary divides
  • Implicit in many government portfolios/legislation
  • Water/private/public land divisions especially
    protected public lands
  • Conservation biology has already developed the
    necessary tools to identify priority sites for
    ecosystem restoration
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