School of Environmental Studies, University of Victoria, 3800 Finnerty Road, Victoria, BC V8P5C2, Canada.
Hakai Institute, Calvert Island, P.O. Box 309, Heriot Bay, BC V0P 1H0, Canada.
Conserv Biol. 2018 Jun;32(3):672-684. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13036. Epub 2018 Jan 22.
Land-use change is the largest proximate threat to biodiversity yet remains one of the most complex to manage. In British Columbia (BC), where large mammals roam extensive tracts of intact habitat, continued land-use development is of global concern. Extant mammal diversity in BC is unrivalled in North America owing, in part, to its unique position at the intersection of alpine, boreal, and temperate biomes. Despite high conservation values, understanding of cumulative ecological impacts from human development is limited. Using cumulative-effects-assessment (CEA) methods, we assessed the current human footprint over 16 regional ecosystems and 7 large mammal species. Using historical and current range estimates of the mammals, we investigated impacts of human land use on species' persistence. For ecosystems, we found that bunchgrass, coastal Douglas fir, and ponderosa pine have been subjected to over 50% land-use conversion, and over 85% of their spatial extent has undergone either direct or estimated indirect impacts. Of the mammals we considered, wolves were the least affected by land conversion, yet all species had reduced ranges compared with historical estimates. We found evidence of a hard trade-off between development and conservation, most clearly for mammals with large distributions and ecosystems with high levels of conversion. Rather than serve as a platform to monitor species decline, we strongly advocate these data be used to inform land-use planning and to assess current conservation efforts. More generally, CEAs offer a robust tool to inform wildlife and habitat conservation at scale.
土地利用变化是对生物多样性的最大直接威胁,但也是最难管理的威胁之一。在不列颠哥伦比亚省(BC),大型哺乳动物在大片完整的栖息地中漫游,持续的土地利用开发引起了全球关注。由于其独特的地理位置位于高山、北方针叶林和温带生物群落的交汇处,BC 省现有的哺乳动物多样性在北美的无与伦比。尽管具有很高的保护价值,但对人类发展的累积生态影响的理解是有限的。使用累积效应评估(CEA)方法,我们评估了 16 个区域生态系统和 7 种大型哺乳动物物种目前的人类足迹。使用哺乳动物的历史和当前范围估计,我们研究了人类土地利用对物种生存的影响。对于生态系统,我们发现丛生草原、沿海道格拉斯冷杉和黄松已经经历了超过 50%的土地利用转换,超过 85%的空间范围已经直接或估计受到间接影响。在我们考虑的哺乳动物中,狼受土地转换的影响最小,但与历史估计相比,所有物种的分布范围都有所减少。我们发现开发和保护之间存在明显的权衡取舍,对于分布范围较大和转换水平较高的生态系统和哺乳动物,这种情况最为明显。我们强烈主张,这些数据不仅要作为监测物种减少的平台,还要用于告知土地利用规划,并评估当前的保护工作。更一般地说,CEA 提供了一个强大的工具,可以大规模地为野生动物和栖息地保护提供信息。