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Research work
Maximizing the ecological contribution of conservation banks
Authors
Bonnie
Bunn
+29 more
California Department of Fish and Game [CDFG]
CH2MHILL
Dudgeon
Fleischer
Forman
Forman
Kindlmann
King
Lambeck
Magle
Margules
Margules
Mead
Meyers
Moyle
Naiman
National Marine Fisheries Service [NMFS]
Noss
Noss
Pascual-Horton
Poiani
Pollack
Prugh
Roberts
Sawyer
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service [USFWS]
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service [USFWS]
Wheeler
Wilcove
Publication date
1 January 2014
Publisher
'Wiley'
Doi
Abstract
In 1995, California established the first conservation banking program in the United States to provide a new financial mechanism to conserve wildlife and natural communities in rapidly developing regions. Conservation banks are lands protected and managed for conservation of species of concern. Developers may purchase species credits from a conservation bank to offset adverse impacts of development at another site. Conservation banks facilitate pooling of mitigation resources from multiple development projects to protect planned habitat reserves of greater ecological value than can be achieved with project-byproject mitigation. In this study, we conducted the first ever assessment of the ecological performance of the California Conservation Banking Program. Specifically, we investigated to what extent conservation banks contribute to achieving regional conservation objectives.We hypothesized that conservation banks within a region should have similarly high ecological values if they are appropriately evaluated and prioritized based on principles of conservation planning. We created a new ecological value metric to evaluate and rank conservation banks and used it to compare potential conservation banks or reserves within a region. We found the ecological value of banks within regions varied and concluded that maximizing the ecological contribution of conservation banks requires prioritization of lands for potential bank sites and reserves. Our analysis identified circumstances where conservation banking is not an appropriate mitigation mechanism to protect rare species and natural communities. We concluded that limited funding for conservation planning should be directed toward regions where species of concern are wide-ranging, biodiversity is highly variable, threats to species of concern are highly varied, and there are many potential conservation bank sites. © 2013 The Wildlife Society
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info:doi/10.1002%2Fwsb.398
Last time updated on 01/04/2019
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eScholarship - University of California
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Last time updated on 25/12/2021