Article

Targeting Conservation Actions at Species Threat Response Thresholds

Details

Citation

Ingram DJ, Ferreira GB, Jones KE & Mace GM (2021) Targeting Conservation Actions at Species Threat Response Thresholds. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 36 (3), pp. 216-226. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2020.11.004

Abstract
To improve the status of the world’s biodiversity by 2030, conservation actions must not only seek to halt or slow biodiversity loss, they must increase species’ populations. A better mechanistic understanding of biodiversity loss and of species’ sensitivities to certain intensities of threats is needed to target conservation actions effectively. Moving beyond ordinal space-for-time substitution analyses, towards monitoring concurrent changes in threats and species’ populations over time will help achieve this. We propose a framework to quantify species’ response thresholds along gradients of threat intensity, using a combination of threat-sensitive taxa, biogeographic regions, and biomes. This framework will allow efficient targeting of conservation actions, of relevance to global policy-making. Given the failure of the world’s governments to improve the status of biodiversity by 2020, a new strategic plan for 2030 is being developed. In order to be successful, a step-change is needed to not just simply halt biodiversity loss, but to bend the curve of biodiversity loss to stable or increasing species’ populations. Here, we propose a framework that quantifies species’ responses across gradients of threat intensity to implement more efficient and better targeted conservation actions. Our framework acknowledges the variation in threat intensities as well as the differences among species in their capacity to respond, and is implemented at a relevant scale for national and international policy-making.

Keywords
anthropocene; biodiversity; biome; biotic responses; extinction; threshold

StatusPublished
Publication date31/03/2021
Publication date online05/12/2020
Date accepted by journal05/12/2020
ISSN0169-5347
eISSN1872-8383