Habitat conservation is a management practice that seeks to conserve, protect and restore habitats and prevent species extinction, fragmentation or reduction in range. It is a priority of many groups that cannot be easily characterized in terms of any one ideology.
History of the conservation movement
For much of human history, nature was seen as a resource that could be controlled by the government and used for personal and economic gain. The idea was that plants only existed to feed animals and animals only existed to feed humans. The value of land was limited only to the resources it provided such as fertile soil, timber, and minerals.
Throughout the 18th and 19th centuries, social views started to
change and conservation principles were first practically applied to the
forests of British India. The conservation ethic that began to evolve included three core principles: 1) human activities damage the environment, 2) there was a civic duty
to maintain the environment for future generations, and 3) scientific,
empirically-based methods should be applied to ensure this duty was
carried out. Sir James Ranald Martin
was prominent in promoting this ideology, publishing numerous
medico-topographical reports that demonstrated the damage from
large-scale deforestation and desiccation, and lobbying extensively for the institutionalization of forest conservation activities in British India through the establishment of Forest Departments.
The Madras Board of Revenue started local conservation efforts in 1842, headed by Alexander Gibson, a professional botanist
who systematically adopted a forest conservation program based on
scientific principles. This was the first case of state conservation
management of forests in the world. Governor-General Lord Dalhousie introduced the first permanent and large-scale forest conservation program in 1855, a model that soon spread to other colonies, as well to the United States, where Yellowstone National Park was opened in 1872 as the world’s first national park.
Rather than focusing on the economic or material benefits from
nature, humans began to appreciate the value of nature itself and the
need to protect it.
By the mid-20th century, countries such as the United States, Canada,
and Britain instigated laws and legislation in order to ensure that the
most fragile and beautiful environments would be protected for
posterity.
Today, with the help of NGO’s and governments worldwide, a strong movement is mobilizing with the goal of protecting habitats and preserving biodiversity
on a global scale. The commitments and actions of small volunteer
associations in villages and towns, that endeavour to emulate the work
of well known Conservation Organisations, are paramount in ensuring generations that follow understand the importance of natural resource conservation.
Values of natural habitat
The natural environment is a source for a wide range of resources that can be exploited for economic profit, for example timber is harvested from forests and clean water is obtained from natural streams. However, land development
from anthropogenic economic growth often causes a decline in the
ecological integrity of nearby natural habitat. For instance, this was
an issue in the northern rocky mountains of the USA.
However, there is also economic value in conserving natural
habitats. Financial profit can be made from tourist revenue, for example
in the tropics where species diversity is high, or in recreational
sports which take place in natural environments such as hiking and mountain biking. The cost of repairing damaged ecosystems is considered to be much higher than the cost of conserving natural ecosystems.
Measuring the worth of conserving different habitat areas is
often criticized as being too utilitarian from a philosophical point of
view.
Biodiversity
Habitat conservation is important in maintaining biodiversity,
an essential part of global food security. There is evidence to support
a trend of accelerating erosion of the genetic resources of
agricultural plants and animals.
An increase in genetic similarity of agricultural plants and animals
means an increased risk of food loss from major epidemics. Wild species
of agricultural plants have been found to be more resistant to disease,
for example the wild corn species Teosinte is resistant to 4 corn
diseases that affect human grown crops.
A combination of seed banking and habitat conservation has been
proposed to maintain plant diversity for food security purposes.
Classifying environmental values
Pearce and Moran outlined the following method for classifying environmental uses:
- Direct extractive uses: e.g. timber from forests, food from plants and animals
- Indirect uses: e.g. ecosystem services like flood control, pest control, erosion protection
- Optional uses: future possibilities e.g. unknown but potential use of plants in chemistry/medicine
- Non-use values:
- Bequest value (benefit of an individual who knows that others may benefit from it in future)
- Passive use value (sympathy for natural environment, enjoyment of the mere existence of a particular species)
Impacts
Natural causes
Habitat loss
and destruction can occur both naturally and through anthropogenic
causes. Events leading to natural habitat loss include climate change,
catastrophic events such as volcanic explosions and through the
interactions of invasive and non-invasive species. Natural climate
change, events have previously been the cause of many widespread and
large scale losses in habitat. For example, some of the mass extinction
events generally referred to as the "Big Five" have coincided with large
scale such as the Earth entering an ice age, or alternate warming
events. Other events in the big five also have their roots in natural causes, such as volcanic explosions and meteor collisions. The Chicxulub
impact is one such example, which has previously caused widespread
losses in habitat as the Earth either received less sunlight or grew
colder, causing certain fauna and flora to flourish whilst others
perished. Previously known warm areas in the tropics, the most
sensitive habitats on Earth, grew colder, and areas such as Australia
developed radically different flora and fauna to those seen today. The
big five mass extinction events have also been linked to sea level
changes, indicating that large scale marine species loss was strongly
influenced by loss in marine habitats, particularly shelf habitats. Methane-driven oceanic eruptions have also been shown to have caused smaller mass extinction events.
Human impacts
Humans
have been the cause of many species’ extinction. Due to humans’
changing and modifying their environment, the habitat of other species
often become altered or destroyed as a result of human actions. Even
before the modern industrial era, humans were having widespread, and
major effects on the environment. A good example of this is found in
Aboriginal Australians and Australian megafauna.
Aboriginal hunting practices, which included burning large sections of
forest at a time, eventually altered and changed Australia’s vegetation
so much that many herbivorous megafauna species were left with no
habitat and were driven into extinction. Once herbivorous megafauna
species became extinct, carnivorous megafauna species soon followed.
In the recent past, humans have been responsible for causing more
extinctions within a given period of time than ever before. Deforestation, pollution, anthropogenic climate change and human settlements have all been driving forces in altering or destroying habitats. The destruction of ecosystems such as rainforests has resulted in countless habitats being destroyed. These biodiversity hotspots are home to millions of habitat specialists, which do not exist beyond a tiny area.
Once their habitat is destroyed, they cease to exist.This destruction
has a follow-on effect, as species which coexist or depend upon the
existence of other species also become extinct, eventually resulting in
the collapse of an entire ecosystem.
These time-delayed extinctions are referred to as the extinction debt,
which is the result of destroying and fragmenting habitats.
As a result of anthropogenic modification of the environment, the
extinction rate has climbed to the point where the Earth is now within a
sixth mass extinction event, as commonly agreed by biologists. This has been particularly evident, for example, in the rapid decline in the number of amphibian species worldwide.
Approaches and methods of habitat conservation
Determining
the size, type and location of habitat to conserve is a complex area of
conservation biology. Although difficult to measure and predict, the
conservation value of a habitat is often a reflection of the quality
(e.g. species abundance and diversity), endangerment of encompassing
ecosystems, and spatial distribution of that habitat.
Identifying priority habitats for conservation
Habitat
conservation is vital for protecting species and ecological processes.
It is important to conserve and protect the space/ area in which that
species occupies.
Therefore, areas classified as ‘biodiversity hotspots’, or those in
which a flagship, umbrella, or endangered species inhabits are often the
habitats that are given precedence over others. Species that possess an
elevated risk of extinction are given the highest priority and as a
result of conserving their habitat, other species in that community are
protected thus serving as an element of gap analysis. In the United
States of America, a Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) is often developed to conserve the environment in which a specific species inhabits. Under the U.S. Endangered Species Act
(ESA) the habitat that requires protection in an HCP is referred to as
the ‘critical habitat’. Multiple-species HCPs are becoming more
favourable than single-species HCPs as they can potentially protect an
array of species before they warrant listing under the ESA, as well as
being able to conserve broad ecosystem components and processes . As of
January 2007, 484 HCPs were permitted across the United States, 40 of
which covered 10 or more species.The San Diego Multiple Species
Conservation Plan (MSCP) encompasses 85 species in a total area of
26,000-km2. Its aim is to protect the habitats of multiple species and
overall biodiversity by minimizing development in sensitive areas.
HCPs require clearly defined goals and objectives, efficient
monitoring programs, as well as successful communication and
collaboration with stakeholders and land owners in the area. Reserve
design is also important and requires a high level of planning and
management in order to achieve the goals of the HCP. Successful reserve
design often takes the form of a hierarchical system with the most
valued habitats requiring high protection being surrounded by buffer
habitats that have a lower protection status. Like HCPs, hierarchical
reserve design is a method most often used to protect a single species,
and as a result habitat corridors are maintained, edge effects are
reduced and a broader suite of species are protected.
How much habitat is needed
A
range of methods and models currently exist that can be used to
determine how much habitat is to be conserved in order to sustain a viable population, including Resource Selection Function
and Step Selection models. Modelling tools often rely on the spatial
scale of the area as an indicator of conservation value. There has been
an increase in emphasis on conserving few large areas of habitat as
opposed to many small areas. This idea is often referred to as the
"single large or several small", SLOSS debate, and is a highly controversial area among conservation biologists and ecologists.
The reasons behind the argument that "larger is better" include the
reduction in the negative impacts of patch edge effects, the general
idea that species richness increases with habitat area
and the ability of larger habitats to support greater populations with
lower extinction probabilities. Noss & Cooperrider support the
"larger is better" claim and developed a model that implies areas of
habitat less than 1000ha are "tiny" and of low conservation value.
However, Shwartz suggests that although "larger is better", this does
not imply that "small is bad". Shwartz argues that human induced habitat
loss leaves no alternative to conserving small areas. Furthermore, he
suggests many endangered species which are of high conservation value,
may only be restricted to small isolated patches
of habitat, and thus would be overlooked if larger areas were given a
higher priority. The shift to conserving larger areas is somewhat
justified in society by placing more value on larger vertebrate species,
which naturally have larger habitat requirements.
Examples of current conservation organizations
The Nature Conservancy
Since its formation in 1951 The Nature Conservancy
has slowly developed into one of the world’s largest conservation
organizations. Currently operating in over 30 countries, across 5
continents worldwide, The Nature Conservancy aims to protect nature and
its assets for future generations.
The organization purchases land or accepts land donations with the
intension of conserving its natural resources. In 1955 The Nature
Conservancy purchased its first 60-acre plot near the New
York/Connecticut border in the United States of America. Today the
Conservancy has expanded to protect over 119 million acres of land,
5,000 river miles as well as participating in over 1000 marine
protection programs across the globe .
Since its beginnings The Nature Conservancy has understood the benefit
in taking a scientific approach towards habitat conservation. For the
last decade the organization has been using a collaborative, scientific
method known as ‘Conservation by Design’. By collecting and analyzing
scientific data The Conservancy is able to holistically approach the
protection of various ecosystems. This process determines the habitats
that need protection, specific elements that should be conserved as well
as monitoring progress so more efficient practices can be developed for
the future.
The Nature Conservancy currently has a large number of diverse
projects in operation. They work with countries around the world to
protect forests, river systems, oceans, deserts and grasslands. In all
cases the aim is to provide a sustainable environment for both the plant
and animal life forms that depend on them as well as all future
generations to come.
World Wildlife Fund (WWF)
The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) was first formed in after a group of passionate conservationists signed what is now referred to as the Morges Manifesto.
WWF is currently operating in over 100 countries across 5 continents
with a current listing of over 5 million supporters.
One of the first projects of WWF was assisting in the creation of the
Charles Darwin Research Foundation which aided in the protection of
diverse range of unique species existing on the Galápagos’ Islands,
Ecuador. It was also a WWF grant that helped with the formation of the
College of African Wildlife Management in Tanzania which today focuses
on teaching a wide range of protected area management skills in areas
such as ecology, range management and law enforcement.
The WWF has since gone on to aid in the protection of land in Spain, creating the Coto Doñana National Park in order to conserve migratory birds and The Democratic Republic of Congo,
home to the world’s largest protected wetlands. The WWF also initiated a
debt-for-nature concept which allows the country to put funds normally
allocated to paying off national debt, into conservation programs that
protect its natural landscapes. Countries currently participating
include Madagascar, the first country to participate which since 1989 has generated over $US50 million towards preservation, Bolivia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Gabon, the Philippines and Zambia.
Rare Conservation
Rare
has been in operation since 1973 with current global partners in over
50 countries and offices in the United States of America, Mexico, the
Philippines, China and Indonesia. Rare focuses on the human activity
that threatens biodiversity and habitats such as overfishing and
unsustainable agriculture. By engaging local communities and changing
behaviour Rare has been able to launch campaigns to protect areas in
most need of conservation.
The key aspect of Rare’s methodology is their "Pride Campaign’s". For
example, in the Andes in South America, Rare has incentives to develop
watershed protection practices. In the Southeast Asia’s "coral
triangle" Rare is training fishers in local communities to better manage
the areas around the coral reefs in order to lessen human impact.
Such programs last for three years with the aim of changing community
attitudes so as to conserve fragile habitats and provide ecological
protection for years to come.
WWF Netherlands
WWF
Netherlands, along with ARK Nature, Wild Wonders of Europe and
Conservation Capital have started the Rewilding Europe project. This
project intents to rewild several areas in Europe.