Litcius/Paper detail

Towards a taxonomically unbiased European Union biodiversity strategy for 2030

Stefano Mammola, Nicoletta Riccardi, Vincent Prié, Ricardo Correia, Pedro Cardoso, Manuel Lopes-Lima, Ronaldo Sousa

2020Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences124 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Through the Habitats Directive (92/43/EEC) and the financial investments of the LIFE projects, Europe has become an experimental arena for biological conservation. With an estimated annual budget of €20 billion, the EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2030 has set an ambitious goal of classifying 30% of its land and sea territory as Protected Areas and ensuring no deterioration in conservation trends and the status of protected species. We analysed LIFE projects focused on animals from 1992 to 2018 and found that investment in vertebrates was six times higher than that for invertebrates (€970 versus €150 million), with birds and mammals alone accounting for 72% of species and 75% of the total budget. In relative terms, investment per species towards vertebrates has been 468 times higher than that for invertebrates. Using a trait-based approach, we show that conservation effort is primarily explained by species' popularity rather than extinction risk or body size. Therefore, we propose a roadmap to achieve unbiased conservation targets for 2030 and beyond.

Topics & Concepts

BiodiversityHabitats DirectiveEuropean unionInvestment (military)Extinction (optical mineralogy)GeographyHabitatPopularityDirectiveEnvironmental resource managementEcologyThreatened speciesIUCN Red ListGlobal biodiversityInvertebrateNatura 2000Natural resource economicsBiodiversity conservationFisheryEnvironmental protectionConservation biologyHabitat conservationMarine biodiversityClimate changeEnvironmental planningBusinessHabitat destructionEndangered speciesEnvironmental Conservation and ManagementSpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeConservation, Ecology, Wildlife Education