TY - JOUR
T1 - Protected areas have a mixed impact on waterbirds, but management helps
AU - Wauchope, H.S.
AU - Jones, J.P.G.
AU - Geldmann, J.
AU - Simmons, B.I.
AU - Amano, T.
AU - Blanco, D.E.
AU - Fuller, R.A.
AU - Johnston, A.
AU - Langendoen, T.
AU - Mundkur, T.
AU - Nagy, S.
AU - Sutherland, W.J.
N1 - This data collection effort is funded by the Ministry of the Environment of Japan, Environment Canada, AEWA Secretariat, EU LIFE+ NGO Operational Grant, MAVA Foundation, Swiss Federal Office for Environment and Nature, French Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development, UK Department of Food and Rural Affairs, Norwegian Nature Directorate, Dutch Ministry of Economics, Agriculture and Innovation, DOB Ecology and Wetlands International members.
H.S.W. was funded by a Cambridge–Australia Poynton Scholarship, Cambridge Department of Zoology J. S. Gardiner Studentship and Cambridge Philosophical Society Grant. H.S.W. and B.I.S. are funded by the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851. W.J.S. was funded by Arcadia, The David and Claudia Harding Foundation and MAVA. J.P.G.J. was supported by a visiting fellowship to Fitzwilliam College Cambridge. This work was performed using resources provided by the Cambridge Service for Data Driven Discovery (CSD3) operated by the University of Cambridge Research Computing Service ( www.csd3.cam.ac.uk ), provided by Dell EMC and Intel using Tier-2 funding from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (capital grant EP/P020259/1), and DiRAC funding from the Science and Technology Facilities Council ( www.dirac.ac.uk ).
PY - 2022/4/20
Y1 - 2022/4/20
N2 - International policy is focused on increasing the proportion of the Earth’s surface that is protected for nature1,2. Although studies show that protected areas prevent habitat loss3–6, there is a lack of evidence for their effect on species’ populations: existing studies are at local scale or use simple designs that lack appropriate controls7–13. Here we explore how 1,506 protected areas have affected the trajectories of 27,055 waterbird populations across the globe using a robust before–after control–intervention study design, which compares protected and unprotected populations in the years before and after protection. We show that the simpler study designs typically used to assess protected area effectiveness (before–after or control–intervention) incorrectly estimate effects for 37–50% of populations—for instance misclassifying positively impacted populations as negatively impacted, and vice versa. Using our robust study design, we find that protected areas have a mixed impact on waterbirds, with a strong signal that areas managed for waterbirds or their habitat are more likely to benefit populations, and a weak signal that larger areas are more beneficial than smaller ones. Calls to conserve 30% of the Earth’s surface by 2030 are gathering pace14, but we show that protection alone does not guarantee good biodiversity outcomes. As countries gather to agree the new Global Biodiversity Framework, targets must focus on creating and supporting well-managed protected and conserved areas that measurably benefit populations.
AB - International policy is focused on increasing the proportion of the Earth’s surface that is protected for nature1,2. Although studies show that protected areas prevent habitat loss3–6, there is a lack of evidence for their effect on species’ populations: existing studies are at local scale or use simple designs that lack appropriate controls7–13. Here we explore how 1,506 protected areas have affected the trajectories of 27,055 waterbird populations across the globe using a robust before–after control–intervention study design, which compares protected and unprotected populations in the years before and after protection. We show that the simpler study designs typically used to assess protected area effectiveness (before–after or control–intervention) incorrectly estimate effects for 37–50% of populations—for instance misclassifying positively impacted populations as negatively impacted, and vice versa. Using our robust study design, we find that protected areas have a mixed impact on waterbirds, with a strong signal that areas managed for waterbirds or their habitat are more likely to benefit populations, and a weak signal that larger areas are more beneficial than smaller ones. Calls to conserve 30% of the Earth’s surface by 2030 are gathering pace14, but we show that protection alone does not guarantee good biodiversity outcomes. As countries gather to agree the new Global Biodiversity Framework, targets must focus on creating and supporting well-managed protected and conserved areas that measurably benefit populations.
U2 - 10.1038/s41586-022-04617-0
DO - 10.1038/s41586-022-04617-0
M3 - Article
SN - 0028-0836
VL - 605
SP - 103
EP - 107
JO - Nature
JF - Nature
ER -