Protecting wilderness areas (WAs) is a crucial proactive approach to sustain biodiversity. However, studies identifying local-scale WAs for on-ground conservation efforts are still very limited. This paper investigated the spatial patterns of wilderness in a global biodiversity hotspot – Three Parallel Rivers Region (TPRR) in southwest China. Wilderness was classified into levels 1 to 10 based on a cluster analysis of five indicators, namely human population density, naturalness, fragmentation, remoteness and ruggedness. Only patches characterized by wilderness level 1 and ≥1.0 km2 were considered WAs. The wilderness levels in the northwest were significantly higher than those in the southeast and clearly increased with the increase in elevation. The WAs covered approximately 25% of TPRR’s land, 89.3% of which was located in the >3,000 m elevation zones. WAs consisted of 20 vegetation types, among which temperate conifer forest, cold temperate shrub and alpine ecosystems covered 79.4% of WAs’ total area. Most WAs were still not protected yet by existing reserves. Topography and human activities are the primary influencing factors on the spatial patterns of wilderness. We suggest establishing strictly protected reserves for most large WAs, while some sustainable management approaches might be more optimal solutions for many highly fragmented small WAs.
Identifying local-scale wilderness for on-ground conservation actions within a global biodiversity hotspot
Shiwei Lin,Ruidong Wu,Chaolang Hua,Jianzhong Ma,Wenli Wang,Feiling Yang,Junjun Wang
Published 2016 in Scientific Reports
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2016
- Venue
Scientific Reports
- Publication date
2016-05-16
- Fields of study
Geography, Medicine, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
CITATION MAP
EXTRACTION MAP
CLAIMS
CONCEPTS
- elevation zones
Altitude bands used to summarize how wilderness distribution changes with height, including zones above 3,000 m.
Aliases: elevation band, altitudinal zones
- existing reserves
The formal protected-area network used to assess whether wilderness areas already have legal protection.
Aliases: reserves, protected reserves
- three parallel rivers region (tprr)
A global biodiversity hotspot in southwest China that serves as the study region for the wilderness analysis.
Aliases: TPRR, Three Parallel Rivers Region
- topography and human activities
The terrain conditions and human pressure variables identified as the main drivers of wilderness spatial patterns.
Aliases: topography, human activities
- vegetation types
Vegetation classes recorded within wilderness areas to describe their ecological composition.
Aliases: vegetation classes
- wilderness areas (was)
Patches classified as wilderness level 1 and at least 1.0 km2 in area that are treated as conservation units.
Aliases: WAs, wilderness areas
- wilderness level classification
An ordinal scheme that assigns wilderness levels 1 to 10 using human population density, naturalness, fragmentation, remoteness, and ruggedness.
Aliases: wilderness levels
REFERENCES
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