Ferraro Paul J, Pressey Robert L
Carey School of Business and Department of Geography and Environmental Engineering, Whiting School of Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA
Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland 4811, Australia.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2015 Nov 5;370(1681). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2014.0270.
Success in conservation depends on our ability to reduce human pressures in areas that harbour biological diversity and ecosystem services. Legally protecting some of these areas through the creation of protected areas is a key component of conservation efforts globally. To develop effective protected area networks, practitioners need credible, scientific evidence about the degree to which protected areas affect environmental and social outcomes, and how these effects vary with context. Such evidence has been lacking, but the situation is changing as conservation scientists adopt more sophisticated research designs for evaluating protected areas' past impacts and for predicting their future impacts. Complementing these scientific advances, conservation funders and practitioners are paying increasing attention to evaluating their investments with more scientifically rigorous evaluation designs. This theme issue highlights recent advances in the science of protected area evaluations and explores the challenges to developing a more credible evidence base that can help societies achieve their goals of protecting nature while enhancing human welfare.
保护工作的成功取决于我们在拥有生物多样性和生态系统服务的地区减轻人类压力的能力。通过设立保护区对其中一些地区进行法律保护是全球保护工作的关键组成部分。为了建立有效的保护区网络,从业者需要可靠的科学证据,以证明保护区在多大程度上影响环境和社会成果,以及这些影响如何因具体情况而异。此前一直缺乏此类证据,但随着保护科学家采用更复杂的研究设计来评估保护区过去的影响并预测其未来影响,情况正在发生变化。作为这些科学进展的补充,保护资金提供者和从业者越来越注重采用更科学严谨的评估设计来评估他们的投资。本专题文章重点介绍了保护区评估科学的最新进展,并探讨了建立更可靠的证据基础所面临的挑战,这有助于社会在增进人类福祉的同时实现保护自然的目标。