Habitat connectivity and island biogeography: A call for community-engaged scholarship to address isolated parks and protected areas

Using the theory of island biogeography as a framework, we seek to determine the potential impact of the lack of connectivity between parks and protected areas on large-scale conservation efforts. We analyze lessons learned from the current Yellowstone to Yukon (Y2Y) initiative and develop recommend...

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Veröffentlicht in:Parks stewardship forum 2020-09, Vol.36 (3), p.471-476
Hauptverfasser: Nettles, John M., Brown, Madeline S., Drage, Erinn, Islam, Ariful, Whitener, Patricia A.
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container_end_page 476
container_issue 3
container_start_page 471
container_title Parks stewardship forum
container_volume 36
creator Nettles, John M.
Brown, Madeline S.
Drage, Erinn
Islam, Ariful
Whitener, Patricia A.
description Using the theory of island biogeography as a framework, we seek to determine the potential impact of the lack of connectivity between parks and protected areas on large-scale conservation efforts. We analyze lessons learned from the current Yellowstone to Yukon (Y2Y) initiative and develop recommendations to improve connectivity while incorporating the motivations, needs, and emotions of stakeholder groups. We strongly encourage ecologists, geographers, biologists, and other academics and activists to partake wholly and enthusiastically in communityengaged scholarship through outreach, capacity building, and social capital building through the proven frameworks of consensus-based and structured decisionmaking. Further, we argue that large-scale conservation initiatives may greatly benefit from an approach focused on small, more tangible actions when working toward a larger goal. As human populations and urban–wildland interfaces continue to grow rapidly, former models of park and protected area development become increasingly ineffective. We must adopt new strategies, such as those listed here, in order to increase landscape connectivity and provide effective conservation for all species.
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subjects Biodiversity
Biogeography
Climate change
Community
Conservation
Ecology
Economic development
Ecosystems
Endangered & extinct species
Environmental economics
Environmental protection
Extinction
Human populations
Immigration
Initiatives
Interfaces
Island biogeography
Islands
National parks
Parks
Parks & recreation areas
Protected areas
Scholarships & fellowships
SYSTEMIC THREATS TO PARKS & PROTECTED AREAS: PAPERS FROM THE 2020 GWS STUDENT SUMMIT
Threats
Urban populations
Wildland-urban interface
Wildlife conservation
title Habitat connectivity and island biogeography: A call for community-engaged scholarship to address isolated parks and protected areas
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