Can strategic protected area expansion solve the insufficient representation of biodiversity in protected area networks? A case study from South Africa

Strategic protected area expansion has been proposed as a solution to the inequitable representation of biodiversity in existing protected area networks, but its effectiveness remains untested. South Africa implemented a National Protected Area Expansion Strategy (NPAES) in 2008, which provided the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biological conservation 2025-02, Vol.302, p.110903, Article 110903
Hauptverfasser: von Staden, Lize, Holness, Stephen D., Lombard, Amanda T.
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Lombard, Amanda T.
description Strategic protected area expansion has been proposed as a solution to the inequitable representation of biodiversity in existing protected area networks, but its effectiveness remains untested. South Africa implemented a National Protected Area Expansion Strategy (NPAES) in 2008, which provided the opportunity to examine the role that strategic decision-making played in guiding protected area expansion towards biodiversity priority areas over the following 12 years. The study evaluated three outcomes as evidence for strategic expansion: alignment of annual protected area expansion with NPAES goals, probability of expansion in priority versus non-priority areas, and shifts in expansion drivers from land availability to biodiversity priorities. While post-NPAES expansion generally aligned with its goals, no evidence could be found that this result was due to strategic decision-making. Results reinforce concerns that in under-resourced conservation strategies, ambitious targets can undermine the achievement of strategic objectives. Strategies containing a mix of conservation interventions complementary to the constraints on strategic protected area expansion will support better outcomes for biodiversity. •A study of the real-world implementation of a biodiversity priority map•Awareness of biodiversity priorities doesn't ensure strategic protected area expansion.•Ambitious targets and a lack of resources reinforce opportunistic protected area growth.•Complementary interventions are needed where protected areas are hard to implement.
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subjects 30 × 30 target
biodiversity
Biodiversity representation
case studies
conservation areas
Conservation effectiveness
decision making
Ecosystem conservation targets
Impact evaluation
probability
South Africa
title Can strategic protected area expansion solve the insufficient representation of biodiversity in protected area networks? A case study from South Africa
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