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Forskningsartikel2015Vetenskapligt granskad

Creating a frame of reference for conservation interventions

Bull, J. W.; Singh, Navinder; Suttle, Kenwyn B; Bykova, E.; Milner-Gulland, Eleanor Jane

Sammanfattning

Understanding the context within which conservation interventions take place is critical to effective implementation. The context includes baseline status of conservation targets, and most likely counterfactual given recent trends in those targets i.e. what would have occurred in the absence of intervention. The baseline and counterfactual together provide a 'frame of reference' for judging conservation outcomes. It has recently been demonstrated that, since conservation interventions take place within dynamic systems, and involve either encouraging or discouraging changes in those systems, the reference frame against which interventions are evaluated fundamentally determines how much effort is required to achieve objectives, and whether they are deemed successful. In turn, this makes frames of reference crucial to planning and policy development. Counterfactuals are difficult to estimate, however, and subject to considerable uncertainty. They are consequently not widely specified in practice.We analyse the historical context, baseline and trends for Uzbekistan's semi-arid Ustyurt plateau, as a case study development of a frame of reference for policymaking. Our framework incorporates physical, social, economic and institutional considerations. We conduct analyses of socio-ecological trends relevant to conservation targets in the region over the last 100 years - particularly the iconic, critically endangered saiga antelope Saiga tatarica - based upon primary data sets (e.g. vegetation surveys), secondary data sets obtained from collaborators (e.g. meteorological data), and satellite imagery.We demonstrate that an informative frame of reference can be developed even in the absence of exhaustive data on land use and landscape ecology. This is because the broader historical context, drivers of change, and interactions between these drivers are so influential upon the necessary design of conservation interventions. The approach taken here - of dividing trends and drivers of change into those that are physical, social, economic and institutional, and considering conservation targets in light of each in turn - provides a manageable structure for building a frame of reference. Additionally, it provides a means for making assumptions about the counterfactual explicit, leaving them open to critical evaluation.Finally, by developing alternative feasible counterfactuals, testable hypotheses can be outlined and used to improve future iterations of management plans essentially, an adaptive management approach. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Nyckelord

Baseline; Biodiversity offset; Counterfactual; Uzbekistan

Publicerad i

Land Use Policy
2015, Volym: 49, nummer: SI, sidor: 273-286

    UKÄ forskningsämne

    Skogsvetenskap
    Ekologi

    Publikationens identifierare

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landusepol.2015.08.005

    Permanent länk till denna sida (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/68378