Opportunities to improve the future of South Australia’s terrestrial biodiversity

Q1 Agricultural and Biological Sciences Rethinking Ecology Pub Date : 2019-09-04 DOI:10.3897/RETHINKINGECOLOGY.4.32570
C. Bradshaw
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

It is unequivocal that the poor condition of South Australia’s terrestrial biodiversity is continuing to decline overall – much like elsewhere in Australia. This decline is mainly due to the legacy of vegetation clearing and habitat modification since European colonisation, the destructive influence of invasive species (especially predators like cats and foxes) on its native fauna and flora, and impotent or broken legislation to prevent further damage. The struggle to maintain our remaining biodiversity, and our intentions to restore once-healthy ecosystems, are rendered even more difficult by the added influence of rapid climate disruption. Despite the pessimistic outlook, South Australians have successfully employed several effective conservation mechanisms, including increasing the coverage of our network of protected areas, doing ecological restoration projects, reducing the densities of feral animals across landscapes, encouraging private landholders to protect their biodiversity assets, releasing environmental water flows to rivers and wetlands, and bringing more people in touch with nature. While these strategies are certainly stepping in the right direction, our policies and conservation targets have been hampered by arbitrary baselines, a lack of cohesion among projects and associated legislation, unrepresentative protected areas, and inappropriate spatial and time scales of intervention. While the challenges are many, there are several tractable and affordable actions that can be taken immediately to improve the prospect of the State’s biodiversity into the near future. These include coordinating existing and promoting broader-scale ecological restoration projects, establishing strategic and evidence-based control of invasive species, planning more representative protected-area networks that are managed effectively for conservation outcomes, fixing broken environmental legislation, avoiding or severely limiting biodiversity-offset incentives, expanding conservation covenants on private land, coordinating a state-wide monitoring network and protocol that tells the South Australian community how effective we are with our policies and actions, expanding existing conservation investment and tapping into different funding schemes, and coordinating better communication and interaction among government and non-governmental environment agencies. Having a more transparent and defensible link between specific conservation actions and targeted outcomes will also likely improve confidence that conservation investments are well-spent. With just a little more effort, coordination, funding, and foresight, South Australia has the opportunity to become a pillar of biodiversity conservation.
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改善南澳大利亚陆地生物多样性未来的机会
毫无疑问,南澳大利亚陆地生物多样性的恶劣状况正在总体上持续下降——就像澳大利亚其他地方一样。这种下降主要是由于欧洲殖民以来植被清理和栖息地改造的遗留问题,入侵物种(尤其是猫和狐狸等食肉动物)对当地动植物的破坏性影响,以及防止进一步破坏的立法不力或破坏。由于气候快速破坏的额外影响,维持我们剩余的生物多样性的斗争,以及我们恢复曾经健康的生态系统的意图,变得更加困难。尽管前景悲观,但南澳大利亚州已经成功地采用了几种有效的保护机制,包括增加我们保护区网络的覆盖范围,开展生态恢复项目,降低景观中野生动物的密度,鼓励私人土地所有者保护其生物多样性资产,释放环境水流到河流和湿地,让更多的人接触大自然。虽然这些战略肯定朝着正确的方向前进,但我们的政策和保护目标受到了武断基线、项目和相关立法之间缺乏凝聚力、保护区缺乏代表性以及干预的空间和时间尺度不当的阻碍。虽然挑战很多,但可以立即采取一些易于处理和负担得起的行动,在不久的将来改善国家生物多样性的前景。这些措施包括协调现有的和促进更大规模的生态恢复项目,建立对入侵物种的战略性和循证控制,规划更具代表性的保护区网络,对保护结果进行有效管理,修复破坏性的环境立法,避免或严重限制生物多样性抵消激励措施,扩大对私人土地的保护公约,协调全州范围的监测网络和协议,告诉南澳大利亚社区我们的政策和行动有多有效,扩大现有的保护投资,利用不同的资金计划,协调政府和非政府环境机构之间更好的沟通和互动。在具体的保护行动和有针对性的结果之间建立更透明、更可辩护的联系,也可能提高人们对保护投资花得好的信心。只要多一点努力、协调、资金和远见,南澳大利亚州就有机会成为生物多样性保护的支柱。
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来源期刊
Rethinking Ecology
Rethinking Ecology Environmental Science-Ecology
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