Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota, United States of America.
School of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Westville, South Africa.
PLoS Biol. 2018 Aug 31;16(8):e2005620. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.2005620. eCollection 2018 Aug.
Considerable outside funding will be required to overcome the financial shortfalls faced by most of Africa's protected areas. Given limited levels of external support, it will be essential to allocate these funds wisely. While most recent studies on conservation triage have recommended prioritizing reserves with the highest remaining conservation value (the "last best places"), such investments are complicated by the fact that these same reserves often attract the greatest revenues from ecotourism and thus the most attention from corrupt local governments. Alternatively, philanthropic organizations might achieve greater returns from investing in the management of neglected areas with lower current conservation value but with less financial leakage from corruption. We outline here how high levels of corruption could favor a strategy that shifts investments away from the last best places.
需要大量的外部资金来弥补大多数非洲保护区面临的财务短缺。考虑到外部支持的有限程度,明智地分配这些资金将是至关重要的。虽然最近关于保护分类的大多数研究建议优先考虑具有最高剩余保护价值的保护区(“最后的最佳地点”),但这些相同的保护区往往从生态旅游中获得最大的收入,因此更容易受到腐败的地方政府的关注,这使得这些投资变得复杂。或者,慈善组织可能会从投资于管理目前保护价值较低但腐败造成的财务漏洞较少的被忽视地区中获得更高的回报。我们在这里概述了腐败程度如何有利于一种将投资从最后的最佳地点转移的策略。