Funding begets biodiversity

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Funding begets biodiversity. / Ahrends, Antje; Burgess, Neil David; Gereau, Roy E.; Marchant, Rob; Bulling, Mark T.; Lovett, Jon C.; Platts, Philip J.; Kindemba, Victoria Wilkins; Owen, Nisha; Fanning, Eibleis; Rahbek, Carsten.

In: Diversity and Distributions, Vol. 17, No. 2, 2011, p. 191-200.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ahrends, A, Burgess, ND, Gereau, RE, Marchant, R, Bulling, MT, Lovett, JC, Platts, PJ, Kindemba, VW, Owen, N, Fanning, E & Rahbek, C 2011, 'Funding begets biodiversity', Diversity and Distributions, vol. 17, no. 2, pp. 191-200. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1472-4642.2010.00737.x

APA

Ahrends, A., Burgess, N. D., Gereau, R. E., Marchant, R., Bulling, M. T., Lovett, J. C., Platts, P. J., Kindemba, V. W., Owen, N., Fanning, E., & Rahbek, C. (2011). Funding begets biodiversity. Diversity and Distributions, 17(2), 191-200. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1472-4642.2010.00737.x

Vancouver

Ahrends A, Burgess ND, Gereau RE, Marchant R, Bulling MT, Lovett JC et al. Funding begets biodiversity. Diversity and Distributions. 2011;17(2):191-200. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1472-4642.2010.00737.x

Author

Ahrends, Antje ; Burgess, Neil David ; Gereau, Roy E. ; Marchant, Rob ; Bulling, Mark T. ; Lovett, Jon C. ; Platts, Philip J. ; Kindemba, Victoria Wilkins ; Owen, Nisha ; Fanning, Eibleis ; Rahbek, Carsten. / Funding begets biodiversity. In: Diversity and Distributions. 2011 ; Vol. 17, No. 2. pp. 191-200.

Bibtex

@article{f3b61251697a4d2bb10708dc385c0655,
title = "Funding begets biodiversity",
abstract = "Aim Effective conservation of biodiversity relies on an unbiased knowledge of its distribution. Conservation priority assessments are typically based on the levels of species richness, endemism and threat. Areas identified as important receive the majority of conservation investments, often facilitating further research that results in more species discoveries. Here, we test whether there is circularity between funding and perceived biodiversity, which may reinforce the conservation status of areas already perceived to be important while other areas with less initial funding may remain overlooked. Location Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania. Methods We analysed time series data (1980–2007) of funding (n = 134 projects) and plant species records (n = 75,631) from a newly compiled database. Perceived plant diversity, over three decades, is regressed against funding and environmental factors, and variances decomposed in partial regressions. Cross-correlations are used to assess whether perceived biodiversity drives funding or vice versa. Results Funding explained 65% of variation in perceived biodiversity patterns – six times more variation than accounted for by 34 candidate environmental factors. Cross-correlation analysis showed that funding is likely to be driving conservation priorities and not vice versa. It was also apparent that investment itself may trigger further investments as a result of reduced start-up costs for new projects in areas where infrastructure already exists. It is therefore difficult to establish whether funding, perceived biodiversity, or both drive further funding. However, in all cases, the results suggest that regional assessments of biodiversity conservation importance may be biased by investment. Funding effects might also confound studies on mechanisms of species richness patterns. Main conclusions Continued biodiversity loss commands urgent conservation action even if our knowledge of its whereabouts is incomplete; however, by concentrating inventory funds in areas already perceived as important in terms of biodiversity and/or where start-up costs are lower, we risk losing other areas of underestimated or unknown value. ",
author = "Antje Ahrends and Burgess, {Neil David} and Gereau, {Roy E.} and Rob Marchant and Bulling, {Mark T.} and Lovett, {Jon C.} and Platts, {Philip J.} and Kindemba, {Victoria Wilkins} and Nisha Owen and Eibleis Fanning and Carsten Rahbek",
year = "2011",
doi = "10.1111/j.1472-4642.2010.00737.x",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "191--200",
journal = "Diversity and Distributions",
issn = "1366-9516",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Funding begets biodiversity

AU - Ahrends, Antje

AU - Burgess, Neil David

AU - Gereau, Roy E.

AU - Marchant, Rob

AU - Bulling, Mark T.

AU - Lovett, Jon C.

AU - Platts, Philip J.

AU - Kindemba, Victoria Wilkins

AU - Owen, Nisha

AU - Fanning, Eibleis

AU - Rahbek, Carsten

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - Aim Effective conservation of biodiversity relies on an unbiased knowledge of its distribution. Conservation priority assessments are typically based on the levels of species richness, endemism and threat. Areas identified as important receive the majority of conservation investments, often facilitating further research that results in more species discoveries. Here, we test whether there is circularity between funding and perceived biodiversity, which may reinforce the conservation status of areas already perceived to be important while other areas with less initial funding may remain overlooked. Location Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania. Methods We analysed time series data (1980–2007) of funding (n = 134 projects) and plant species records (n = 75,631) from a newly compiled database. Perceived plant diversity, over three decades, is regressed against funding and environmental factors, and variances decomposed in partial regressions. Cross-correlations are used to assess whether perceived biodiversity drives funding or vice versa. Results Funding explained 65% of variation in perceived biodiversity patterns – six times more variation than accounted for by 34 candidate environmental factors. Cross-correlation analysis showed that funding is likely to be driving conservation priorities and not vice versa. It was also apparent that investment itself may trigger further investments as a result of reduced start-up costs for new projects in areas where infrastructure already exists. It is therefore difficult to establish whether funding, perceived biodiversity, or both drive further funding. However, in all cases, the results suggest that regional assessments of biodiversity conservation importance may be biased by investment. Funding effects might also confound studies on mechanisms of species richness patterns. Main conclusions Continued biodiversity loss commands urgent conservation action even if our knowledge of its whereabouts is incomplete; however, by concentrating inventory funds in areas already perceived as important in terms of biodiversity and/or where start-up costs are lower, we risk losing other areas of underestimated or unknown value.

AB - Aim Effective conservation of biodiversity relies on an unbiased knowledge of its distribution. Conservation priority assessments are typically based on the levels of species richness, endemism and threat. Areas identified as important receive the majority of conservation investments, often facilitating further research that results in more species discoveries. Here, we test whether there is circularity between funding and perceived biodiversity, which may reinforce the conservation status of areas already perceived to be important while other areas with less initial funding may remain overlooked. Location Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania. Methods We analysed time series data (1980–2007) of funding (n = 134 projects) and plant species records (n = 75,631) from a newly compiled database. Perceived plant diversity, over three decades, is regressed against funding and environmental factors, and variances decomposed in partial regressions. Cross-correlations are used to assess whether perceived biodiversity drives funding or vice versa. Results Funding explained 65% of variation in perceived biodiversity patterns – six times more variation than accounted for by 34 candidate environmental factors. Cross-correlation analysis showed that funding is likely to be driving conservation priorities and not vice versa. It was also apparent that investment itself may trigger further investments as a result of reduced start-up costs for new projects in areas where infrastructure already exists. It is therefore difficult to establish whether funding, perceived biodiversity, or both drive further funding. However, in all cases, the results suggest that regional assessments of biodiversity conservation importance may be biased by investment. Funding effects might also confound studies on mechanisms of species richness patterns. Main conclusions Continued biodiversity loss commands urgent conservation action even if our knowledge of its whereabouts is incomplete; however, by concentrating inventory funds in areas already perceived as important in terms of biodiversity and/or where start-up costs are lower, we risk losing other areas of underestimated or unknown value.

U2 - 10.1111/j.1472-4642.2010.00737.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1472-4642.2010.00737.x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

SP - 191

EP - 200

JO - Diversity and Distributions

JF - Diversity and Distributions

SN - 1366-9516

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 40323212