On the protection of “protected areas”
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 6 May 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 105 (18) , 6673-6678
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0802471105
Abstract
Tropical moist forests contain the majority of terrestrial species. Human actions destroy between 1 and 2 million km 2 of such forests per decade, with concomitant carbon release into the atmosphere. Within these forests, protected areas are the principle defense against forest loss and species extinctions. Four regions—the Amazon, Congo, South American Atlantic Coast, and West Africa—once constituted about half the world's tropical moist forest. We measure forest cover at progressively larger distances inside and outside of protected areas within these four regions, using datasets on protected areas and land-cover. We find important geographical differences. In the Amazon and Congo, protected areas are generally large and retain high levels of forest cover, as do their surroundings. These areas are protected de facto by being inaccessible and will likely remain protected if they continue to be so. Deciding whether they are also protected de jure —that is, whether effective laws also protect them—is statistically difficult, for there are few controls. In contrast, protected areas in the Atlantic Coast forest and West Africa show sharp boundaries in forest cover at their edges. This effective protection of forest cover is partially offset by their very small size: little area is deep inside protected area boundaries. Lands outside protected areas in the Atlantic Coast forest are unusually fragmented. Finally, we ask whether global databases on protected areas are biased toward highly protected areas and ignore “paper parks.” Analysis of a Brazilian database does not support this presumption.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Human impacts on the rates of recent, present, and future bird extinctionsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Effectiveness of Protected Areas in Mitigating Fire within Their Boundaries: Case Study of Chiapas, MexicoConservation Biology, 2006
- Money for Nothing? A Call for Empirical Evaluation of Biodiversity Conservation InvestmentsPLoS Biology, 2006
- When bigger is better: the need for Amazonian mega-reservesTrends in Ecology & Evolution, 2005
- GLC2000: a new approach to global land cover mapping from Earth observation dataInternational Journal of Remote Sensing, 2005
- Deforestation in AmazoniaScience, 2004
- Effectiveness of the global protected area network in representing species diversityNature, 2004
- Lowland Forest Loss in Protected Areas of Indonesian BorneoScience, 2004
- Can We Defy Nature's End?Science, 2001
- The Effectiveness of ParksScience, 2001