Back to Search
Journal ArticleOpen Access

Key Biodiversity Areas as Site Conservation Targets

Author Affiliations
International Union for Conservation of Nature (Bangladesh), American Museum of Natural History, BirdLife International, Center for International Environmental Law, ...
Published InBioScience
Year2004
Citations539

Abstract

Site conservation is among the most effective means to reduce global biodiversity loss. Therefore, it is critical to identify those sites where unique biodiversity must be conserved immediately. To this end, the concept of key biodiversity areas (KBAs) has been developed, seeking to identify and, ultimately, ensure that networks of globally important sites are safeguarded. This methodology builds up from the identification of species conservation targets (through the IUCN Red List) and nests within larger-scale conservation approaches. Sites are selected using standardized, globally applicable, threshold-based criteria, driven by the distribution and population of species that require site-level conservation. The criteria address the two key issues for setting site conservation priorities: vulnerability and irreplaceability. We also propose quantitative thresholds for the…
View at Publisher

BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.