As the impacts of anthropogenic activities increase in both magnitude and extent, biodiversity is coming under increasing pressure. Scientists and policy makers are frequently hampered by a lack of information on biological systems, particularly information relating to long-term trends. Such information is crucial to developing an understanding as to how biodiversity may respond to global environmental change. Knowledge gaps make it very difficult to develop effective policies and legislation to reduce and reverse biodiversity loss.
This book explores the gap between global commitments to biodiversity conservation, and local action to track biodiversity change and implement conservation action. High profile international political commitments to improve biodiversity conservation, such as the targets set by the Convention on Biological Diversity, require innovative and rapid responses from both science and policy. This multi-disciplinary perspective highlights barriers to conservation and offers novel solutions to evaluating trends in biodiversity at multiple scales.
Table des matières
Contributors xi
Acknowledgements xv
1. Biodiversity Monitoring and Conservation: Bridging the Gaps Between Global Commitment and Local Action 1
Ben Collen, Nathalie Pettorelli, Jonathan E.M. Baillie and Sarah M. Durant
Part I Species-Based Indicators of Biodiversity Change 17
2. Tracking Change in National-Level Conservation Status: National Red Lists 19
Ben Collen, Janine Griffiths, Yolan Friedmann, Jon Paul Rodriguez, Franklin Rojas-Suarez and Jonathan E.M. Baillie
3. The Wildlife Picture Index: A Biodiversity Indicator for Top Trophic Levels 45
Timothy G. O’Brien and Margaret F. Kinnaird
4. Tracking Change in Abundance: The Living Planet Index 71
Ben Collen, Louise Mc Rae, Jonathan Loh, Stefanie Deinet, Adriana De Palma, Robyn Manley and Jonathan E.M. Baillie
Part II Indicators of the Pressures on Biodiversity 95
5. Satellite Data-Based Indices to Monitor Land Use and Habitat Changes 97
Nathalie Pettorelli
6. Indicators of Climate Change Impacts on Biodiversity 120
Wendy B. Foden, Georgina M. Mace and Stuart H.M. Butchart
7. Monitoring Trends in Biological Invasion, its Impact and Policy Responses 138
Piero Genovesi, Stuart H.M. Butchart, Melodie A. Mc Geoch and David B. Roy
8. Exploitation Indices: Developing Global and National Metrics of Wildlife Use and Trade 159
Rosamunde E.A. Almond, Stuart H.M. Butchart, Thomasina E.E. Oldfield, Louise Mc Rae and Steven de Bie
9. Personalized Measures of Consumption and Development in the Context of Biodiversity Conservation: Connecting the Ecological Footprint Calculation with the Human Footprint Map 189
Eric W. Sanderson
Part III The Next Generation of Biodiversity Indicators 211
10. Indicator Bats Program: A System for the Global Acoustic Monitoring of Bats 213
Kate E. Jones, Jon A. Russ, Andriy-Taras Bashta, Zoltan Bilhari, Colin Catto, Istvan Csosz, Alexander Gorbachev, Peter Gyorfi, Alice Hughes, Igor Ivashkiv, Natalia Koryagina, Aniko Kurali, Steve Langton, Alanna Collen, Georgiana Margiean, Ivan Pandourski, Stuart Parsons, Igor Prokofev, Abigel Szodoray-Paradi, Farkas Szodoray-Paradi, Elena Tilova, Charlotte L. Walters, Aidan Weatherill and Oleg Zavarzin
11. Occupancy Methods for Conservation Management 248
Darryl I. Mac Kenzie and James T. Reardon
12. Monitoring and Evaluating the Socioeconomic Impacts of Conservation Projects on Local Communities 265
Katherine Homewood
13. Science to Policy Linkages for the Post-2010 Biodiversity Targets 291
Georgina M. Mace, Charles Perrings, Philippe Le Prestre, Wolfgang Cramer, Sandra Diaz, Anne Larigauderie, Robert J. Scholes and Harold A. Mooney
Part IV Biodiversity Monitoring in Practice 311
14. Building Sustainable National Monitoring Networks 313
Sarah M. Durant
15. Monitoring in the Real World 335
Julia P.G. Jones
16. Monitoring in UNDP-GEF Biodiversity Projects: Balancing Conservation Priorities, Financial Realities, and Scientific Rigour 348
Sultana Bashir
17. Scaling Up or Down? Linking Global and National Biodiversity Indicators and Reporting 402
Philip Bubb
18. Conserving Biodiversity in a Target-Driven World 421
Simon N. Stuart and Ben Collen
Index 439
A propos de l’auteur
Ben Collen is head of the Indicators & Assessments Unit
at the Zoological Society of London. His research is focussed
on developing indicators to monitor change in biodiversity and help
guide policy responses to conservation problems. He conducts
local scale monitoring on tropical forest fauna in Liberia, and
penguins in the Antarctic.
Nathalie Pettorelli is a population ecologist, whose
research is centred on predicting the impacts of global
environmental change on biodiversity. Her work was among the first
to explore the usefulness of satellite data (in particular, the
Normalised Difference Vegetation Index) in the context of
population ecology and dynamics.
Jonathan Baillie is Director of Conservation at the
Zoological Society of London. He is responsible for conservation
projects focusing on threatened species and habitats in over 50
countries around the world. His research focus lies in defining the
status and trends of the world’s species and ecosystems.
Sarah Durant is head of the Tanzania Carnivore Centre in
Arusha, and the Range Wide Conservation Initiative for Cheetah and
Wild Dog. She has been working for over 20 years in carnivore
conservation in Africa, focussing on developing effective and
sustainable approaches to conserve threatened species.