More cool than tool: Equivoques, conceptual traps and weaknesses of ecological networks in environmental planning and conservation

•In ecological network planning there is an interdisciplinary semantic ambiguity.•Ecological networks lack in the use problem solving logic, decision-making approach, costs/benefits evaluation, monitoring to test effectiveness.•There is an over-emphasis of connectivity as a concept and an under-eval...

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Veröffentlicht in:Land use policy 2017-11, Vol.68, p.686-691
Hauptverfasser: Gippoliti, Spartaco, Battisti, Corrado
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container_title Land use policy
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creator Gippoliti, Spartaco
Battisti, Corrado
description •In ecological network planning there is an interdisciplinary semantic ambiguity.•Ecological networks lack in the use problem solving logic, decision-making approach, costs/benefits evaluation, monitoring to test effectiveness.•There is an over-emphasis of connectivity as a concept and an under-evaluation of more pragmatic local-based measures.•Fragmentation-sensitive species should be selected to monitor effectiveness of ecological network plans. The paper critically examines the equivoques, conceptual traps and weaknesses of the recent ‘ecological network’ paradigm, invocated as a cool environmental planning tool to the aim to mitigate the effect of habitat fragmentation on biodiversity. We highlight as: (i) there is a semantic ambiguity deriving from the languages used in this interdisciplinary arena; (ii) these plans will be considered a true tool for biodiversity conservation when they will adopt a logic of problem solving and the standards requested in project cycle management (clear objectives, decision-making approach, appropriate monitoring and indicators, adaptive management); (iii) planners should follow a costs/benefits analysis comparing different scenarios and verifying that the ‘connectivity’ option effectively work better; (iv) each ecological network should be considered as a context-specific strategy where connectivity is only a simplified and schematic key of interpretation; (v) planners should carried out a local selection of fragmentation-sensitive targets that may not correspond with the species of conservation concern included in global or national red lists.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.landusepol.2017.08.001
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source PAIS Index; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Adaptive management
Ambiguity
Biodiversity
Conservation
Cost benefit analysis
Cost control
Decision making
Dogmatic approach
Ecological effects
Environmental monitoring
Environmental planning
Fragmentation
Habitat fragmentation
Land use
Languages
Linguistic uncertainness
Lists
Networks
Planners
Planning tool
Problem solving
Project management
Studies
Sustainable development
Traps
Wildlife conservation
title More cool than tool: Equivoques, conceptual traps and weaknesses of ecological networks in environmental planning and conservation
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