The rise and rise of predator control: a panacea, or a distraction from conservation goals?

IF 1.9 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ECOLOGY
J. Leathwick, A. Byrom
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

: We review the recent rise to prominence in Aotearoa New Zealand of predation-focused conservation management, critically assessing the likelihood that this will deliver outcomes consistent with national biodiversity goals. Using a review of literature describing the impacts and control of three groups of introduced mammals (wild ungulates, brushtail possums, and predators), we identify shifts in management emphasis over a century of conservation decision-making in Aotearoa. Predators are now a major focus and wild ungulates are left largely uncontrolled, despite increasing populations and evidence for their negative impacts on a wide range of indigenous species and ecosystems. This imbalance in management effort, which appears to be influenced increasingly by socio-political pressures, is much less likely to deliver outcomes consistent with Aotearoa’s biodiversity goals than a systematic approach that addresses a full range of biodiversity threats. Overall, we interpret these shortcomings as reflecting long recognised issues with the governance and leadership of Aotearoa’s biodiversity system. Changes are required to provide adequate, stable funding, improve clarity around goals, leadership, responsibilities and accountabilities, strengthen planning and prioritisation of management actions, and coordinate management among various conservation actors. We also argue for (1) a stronger role for ecological sciences through independent research aimed at strengthening the evidence base for management actions, and (2) explicit inclusion of science expertise in conservation policy development and management decision making. While recent extensive, landscape-scale predator control has caught the imagination of many and has undoubtedly delivered some gains for a small subset of indigenous species, it also risks creating a false sense of achievement that diverts attention away from other serious gaps in progress towards achieving national biodiversity goals. We make 12 recommendations to address these shortcomings.
食肉动物控制的兴起:灵丹妙药,还是对保护目标的干扰?
我们回顾了最近在新西兰奥特罗阿兴起的以捕食者为重点的保护管理,批判性地评估了这将产生与国家生物多样性目标一致的结果的可能性。通过对描述三种引入哺乳动物(野生有蹄类动物、袋貂和食肉动物)的影响和控制的文献回顾,我们确定了一个世纪以来Aotearoa保护决策中管理重点的转变。食肉动物现在是一个主要的焦点,野生有蹄类动物基本上不受控制,尽管它们的数量不断增加,并有证据表明它们对广泛的本地物种和生态系统产生了负面影响。管理工作的这种不平衡似乎越来越受到社会政治压力的影响,与解决各种生物多样性威胁的系统方法相比,这种不平衡产生符合Aotearoa生物多样性目标的结果的可能性要小得多。总的来说,我们将这些缺点解释为反映了Aotearoa生物多样性系统的治理和领导方面长期存在的问题。为了提供充足、稳定的资金,提高目标、领导、责任和问责的清晰度,加强管理行动的规划和优先次序,以及协调各个保护参与者之间的管理,需要进行改革。我们还主张(1)通过旨在加强管理行动证据基础的独立研究,加强生态科学的作用;(2)在保护政策制定和管理决策中明确纳入科学专业知识。虽然最近广泛的、景观规模的捕食者控制引起了许多人的想象,并且无疑为一小部分本地物种带来了一些收益,但它也有可能造成一种虚假的成就感,从而转移人们对实现国家生物多样性目标进展中其他严重差距的注意力。我们提出了12项建议来解决这些缺点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
New Zealand Journal of Ecology
New Zealand Journal of Ecology 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
12.50%
发文量
35
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: The New Zealand Journal of Ecology is a biannual peer-reviewed journal publishing ecological research relevant to New Zealand/Aotearoa and the South Pacific. It has been published since 1952 (as a 1952 issue of New Zealand Science Review and as the Proceedings of the New Zealand Ecological Society until 1977). The Journal is published by the New Zealand Ecological Society (Inc.), and is covered by Current Contents/Agriculture, Biology and Environmental Science, GEOBASE, and Geo Abstracts.
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