Litcius/Paper detail

Balancing conservation priorities for nature and for people in Europe

Louise O’Connor, Laura J. Pollock, Julien Renaud, Willem Verhagen, Peter H. Verburg, Sandra Lavorel, Luigi Maiorano, Wilfried Thuiller

2021Science110 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

There is an urgent need to protect key areas for biodiversity and nature's contributions to people (NCP). However, different values of nature are rarely considered together in conservation planning. Here, we explore potential priority areas in Europe for biodiversity (all terrestrial vertebrates) and a set of cultural and regulating NCP while considering demand for these NCP. We quantify the spatial overlap between these priorities and their performance in representing different values of nature. We show that different priorities rarely coincide, except in certain irreplaceable ecosystems. Notably, priorities for biodiversity better represent NCP than the reverse. Theoretically, protecting an extra 5% of land has the potential to double conservation gains for biodiversity while also maintaining some essential NCP, leading to co-benefits for both nature and people.

Topics & Concepts

Ecosystem servicesBiodiversityTourismEnvironmental resource managementEcosystemCultural heritageValue (mathematics)GeographyEnvironmental planningNature ConservationDistribution (mathematics)Biodiversity conservationConservation biologyFlood mythBusinessEcologyEnvironmental scienceComputer scienceBiologyMachine learningMathematicsMathematical analysisArchaeologyLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesSpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeForest Management and Policy
Balancing conservation priorities for nature and for people in Europe | Litcius