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量化线性基础设施共享使用带来的保护效益。

Quantifying the conservation gains from shared access to linear infrastructure.

作者信息

Runge Claire A, Tulloch Ayesha I T, Gordon Ascelin, Rhodes Jonathan R

机构信息

School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, 4072, Australia.

Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, 4072, Australia.

出版信息

Conserv Biol. 2017 Dec;31(6):1428-1438. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12952. Epub 2017 Sep 4.

Abstract

The proliferation of linear infrastructure such as roads and railways is a major global driver of cumulative biodiversity loss. One strategy for reducing habitat loss associated with development is to encourage linear infrastructure providers and users to share infrastructure networks. We quantified the reductions in biodiversity impact and capital costs under linear infrastructure sharing of a range of potential mine to port transportation links for 47 mine locations operated by 28 separate companies in the Upper Spencer Gulf Region of South Australia. We mapped transport links based on least-cost pathways for different levels of linear-infrastructure sharing and used expert-elicited impacts of linear infrastructure to estimate the consequences for biodiversity. Capital costs were calculated based on estimates of construction costs, compensation payments, and transaction costs. We evaluated proposed mine-port links by comparing biodiversity impacts and capital costs across 3 scenarios: an independent scenario, where no infrastructure is shared; a restricted-access scenario, where the largest mining companies share infrastructure but exclude smaller mining companies from sharing; and a shared scenario where all mining companies share linear infrastructure. Fully shared development of linear infrastructure reduced overall biodiversity impacts by 76% and reduced capital costs by 64% compared with the independent scenario. However, there was considerable variation among companies. Our restricted-access scenario showed only modest biodiversity benefits relative to the independent scenario, indicating that reductions are likely to be limited if the dominant mining companies restrict access to infrastructure, which often occurs without policies that promote sharing of infrastructure. Our research helps illuminate the circumstances under which infrastructure sharing can minimize the biodiversity impacts of development.

摘要

道路和铁路等线性基础设施的扩散是全球生物多样性累计丧失的主要驱动因素。减少与发展相关的栖息地丧失的一种策略是鼓励线性基础设施的提供者和使用者共享基础设施网络。我们对南澳大利亚上斯宾塞湾地区由28家不同公司运营的47个矿场的一系列潜在矿场到港口运输线路进行线性基础设施共享时,生物多样性影响和资本成本的降低情况进行了量化。我们根据不同程度线性基础设施共享的最低成本路径绘制了运输线路图,并利用专家得出的线性基础设施影响来估计对生物多样性的后果。资本成本是根据建设成本、赔偿支付和交易成本的估计来计算的。我们通过比较三种情景下的生物多样性影响和资本成本来评估拟议的矿场到港口线路:独立情景,即不共享任何基础设施;受限准入情景,即最大的矿业公司共享基础设施,但排除较小的矿业公司共享;以及共享情景,即所有矿业公司共享线性基础设施。与独立情景相比,线性基础设施的完全共享开发使总体生物多样性影响降低了76%,资本成本降低了64%。然而,各公司之间存在相当大的差异。我们的受限准入情景相对于独立情景仅显示出适度的生物多样性益处,这表明如果占主导地位的矿业公司限制对基础设施的使用,减少幅度可能有限,而这种情况在没有促进基础设施共享政策的情况下经常发生。我们的研究有助于阐明在何种情况下基础设施共享可以将发展对生物多样性的影响降至最低。

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