Representativeness of China’s Protected Areas in Conserving Its Diverse Terrestrial Ecosystems

Ecological representativeness of protected area networks is essential for leveraging protected areas to achieve conservation goals. On the basis of China’s vegetation map and the spatial data of protected areas, we analyze the representativeness of China’s network of protected areas in protecting di...

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Published in:Ecosystem Health and Sustainability
Main Authors: Fan, Xinyue, Xu, Weihua, Zang, Zhenhua, Ouyang, Zhiyun
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/ehs.0029
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spelling craaas:10.34133/ehs.0029 2024-09-30T14:45:22+00:00 Representativeness of China’s Protected Areas in Conserving Its Diverse Terrestrial Ecosystems Fan, Xinyue Xu, Weihua Zang, Zhenhua Ouyang, Zhiyun 2023 http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/ehs.0029 en eng American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Ecosystem Health and Sustainability volume 9 ISSN 2332-8878 journal-article 2023 craaas https://doi.org/10.34133/ehs.0029 2024-09-19T04:01:12Z Ecological representativeness of protected area networks is essential for leveraging protected areas to achieve conservation goals. On the basis of China’s vegetation map and the spatial data of protected areas, we analyze the representativeness of China’s network of protected areas in protecting distinct types of terrestrial natural ecosystems. Across the major ecosystem classes, wetland, alpine tundra, and grassland have more than 20% of their areas being protected, while shrub, forest, and desert are less covered by protected areas. At the level of ecosystem subclass, 90.2% of the 691 types of natural ecosystems have at least some areas covered by protected areas, but of the rarest natural ecosystem types (i.e., their land areas less than 100 km 2 ), about half were poorly protected (i.e., less than 5% of their extents are protected). A small percentage (14.7%) of natural ecosystem with high human pressure is included in protected areas, whereas 27% of natural ecosystem with the lowest intensity of human pressure occurs in protected areas. To enhance the ecological representativeness of China’s protected areas, we suggest strengthening the protection of underrepresented ecosystems, especially those exposed to high human pressure, by expanding protected area networks and delineating ecological redlines. Article in Journal/Newspaper Tundra AAAS Resource Center (American Association for the Advancement of Science) Ecosystem Health and Sustainability 9
institution Open Polar
collection AAAS Resource Center (American Association for the Advancement of Science)
op_collection_id craaas
language English
description Ecological representativeness of protected area networks is essential for leveraging protected areas to achieve conservation goals. On the basis of China’s vegetation map and the spatial data of protected areas, we analyze the representativeness of China’s network of protected areas in protecting distinct types of terrestrial natural ecosystems. Across the major ecosystem classes, wetland, alpine tundra, and grassland have more than 20% of their areas being protected, while shrub, forest, and desert are less covered by protected areas. At the level of ecosystem subclass, 90.2% of the 691 types of natural ecosystems have at least some areas covered by protected areas, but of the rarest natural ecosystem types (i.e., their land areas less than 100 km 2 ), about half were poorly protected (i.e., less than 5% of their extents are protected). A small percentage (14.7%) of natural ecosystem with high human pressure is included in protected areas, whereas 27% of natural ecosystem with the lowest intensity of human pressure occurs in protected areas. To enhance the ecological representativeness of China’s protected areas, we suggest strengthening the protection of underrepresented ecosystems, especially those exposed to high human pressure, by expanding protected area networks and delineating ecological redlines.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Fan, Xinyue
Xu, Weihua
Zang, Zhenhua
Ouyang, Zhiyun
spellingShingle Fan, Xinyue
Xu, Weihua
Zang, Zhenhua
Ouyang, Zhiyun
Representativeness of China’s Protected Areas in Conserving Its Diverse Terrestrial Ecosystems
author_facet Fan, Xinyue
Xu, Weihua
Zang, Zhenhua
Ouyang, Zhiyun
author_sort Fan, Xinyue
title Representativeness of China’s Protected Areas in Conserving Its Diverse Terrestrial Ecosystems
title_short Representativeness of China’s Protected Areas in Conserving Its Diverse Terrestrial Ecosystems
title_full Representativeness of China’s Protected Areas in Conserving Its Diverse Terrestrial Ecosystems
title_fullStr Representativeness of China’s Protected Areas in Conserving Its Diverse Terrestrial Ecosystems
title_full_unstemmed Representativeness of China’s Protected Areas in Conserving Its Diverse Terrestrial Ecosystems
title_sort representativeness of china’s protected areas in conserving its diverse terrestrial ecosystems
publisher American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
publishDate 2023
url http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/ehs.0029
genre Tundra
genre_facet Tundra
op_source Ecosystem Health and Sustainability
volume 9
ISSN 2332-8878
op_doi https://doi.org/10.34133/ehs.0029
container_title Ecosystem Health and Sustainability
container_volume 9
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