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By John A. Wiens
Picture a nature preserve — a “last great place,” or even just a pretty good place.
Conservationists identify these places and prioritize them through rigorous planning protocols. But how can we ensure that these places will retain their conservation value over the long haul? Or even that they will continue to be the right places? The world is dynamic, after all.
Climate change and its ecological and societal impacts are finally receiving widespread attention. But a related and arguably more urgent issue still needs more focus: land use and land-use change.
Human land uses are the major cause of habitat loss throughout the world, and rates of land-use change are accelerating. Examples are legion:
And the list goes on.
Of course it is naïve to think that only recent land uses affect the integrity of the habitats we strive to conserve:
What we see today contains the legacies of past land uses. 'Natural' is a relative term.
Understanding the effects of the past land uses on natural habitats and biodiversity is useful. But what is really needed is knowledge that can help us anticipate and adjust for future land-use changes.
This knowledge requires an understanding of the underlying socioeconomic and political forces that contribute to land-use change. For example:
In the future, demographic changes such as the retirement of the baby-boom generation, technological advances such as telecommuting and economic expansion in developing countries (witness China!) will all contribute to major shifts in land uses.
Globalization means that land uses in one part of the world are increasingly influenced by factors elsewhere. And the abrupt thresholds in how ecologies respond to land-use change mean that we are likely in for some rude surprises.
A 2002 top story on the NASA Web site bore this headline: “Landcover Changes May Rival Greenhouse Gases as Cause of Climate Change.” Clearly, consideration of climate change and land-use change in isolation from the other provides only a partial picture.
How we deal with the two issues, however, is likely to be quite different. Whereas considerations of climate change tend to start at the global level and work down, land use is essentially local, and the effects of land use and land-use change amplify upwards to broader scales.
Consequently, while there may be some hope of dealing with climate change through broad multinational policy accords, land use is likely to remain immersed in a morass of local and idiosyncratic policies and politics, particularly in the United States.
Actually, quite a lot. Many conservation strategies are aimed at influencing land uses or lessening their impacts on biodiversity, so there is a strong foundation of experience on which to build.
We could bolster some of this experience by using imagery to assess the form and magnitude of land-use changes surrounding protected areas since they were placed under conservation protection. Have they become islands? Have the connections across the landscape disappeared?
But we need also to couple such assessments with analyses of the potential consequences of different scenarios of future land-use changes. We need to develop ways of assessing “conservation futures.”
So what’s the bottom line?
Land-use change will compromise conservation planning efforts if we ignore it or just pay it lip service. Now is the time to start planning for our conservation future.
This essay is adapted from the original version, which was published in the Bulletin of the British Ecological Society.
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Nature picture credits (left to right): © Scott Warren (Planted forests bordering the Sao Francsico Verdadeiro River, Parana state, Brazil); © Mark Godfrey/TNC (John Wiens)
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