Omnidiversity Consolidation of Conservation Assessment: A Case Study of Tasmanian Coastal Geoconservation Sites

The exclusivity of biodiversity and geodiversity assessment hinders conservation outcomes, evidenced by the prioritization of biodiversity in conservation literature, and lagging developmental state in geodiversity assessment approaches, geoconservation strategies and outcomes. This study develops a...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jake Crisp, Joanna Ellison, Andrew Fischer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OICC Press 2022-06-01
Series:Geoconservation Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://gcr.isfahan.iau.ir/article_688942_ffc5855dc12153ac9f19f97affccff07.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832568694031515648
author Jake Crisp
Joanna Ellison
Andrew Fischer
author_facet Jake Crisp
Joanna Ellison
Andrew Fischer
author_sort Jake Crisp
collection DOAJ
description The exclusivity of biodiversity and geodiversity assessment hinders conservation outcomes, evidenced by the prioritization of biodiversity in conservation literature, and lagging developmental state in geodiversity assessment approaches, geoconservation strategies and outcomes. This study develops a consolidated approach, “omnidiversity”, amalgamating geodiversity and biodiversity assessment with geoconservation strategies and complementary ecological conservation criteria using ArcGIS mobile applications. ArcGIS Survey123 was adapted to assess geodiversity, biodiversity, geoconservation criteria and values. ArcGIS FieldMaps facilitated capturing the spatial location of biodiversity and geodiversity features. Three coastal geoconservation sites – Don Heads, Penguin Megabreccia, and Mersey Bluff – on the north-west coast of Tasmania were used as case studies. Results showed highest geodiversity (43.7), species richness (141) and visible interactions between geodiversity and biodiversity (120) at Don Heads geoconservation site, followed by geodiversity (40.5), species richness (107) and interactions (76) at Penguin Megabreccia site, and lowest geodiversity (7.3), species richness (89) and interactions (28) at the Mersey Bluff site. Omnidiversity showed biodiversity at Don Heads as most sensitive to geodiversity degradation attributed to extensive visible interactions, high conservation value, and the presence of sensitive species like the Little Penguin; followed by Penguin Megabreccia and Mersey Bluff coastal geoconservation sites. Omnidiversity allowed time-effective and cost-effective methods to simultaneously assess geodiversity and biodiversity, determine the harboring capacity of geodiversity for biodiversity, and facilitate conservation through unification of disparate steps into one streamlined approach. Using traditional geoconservation strategies, biodiversity values are excluded, and geodiversity elements are conserved only for their geoheritage importance. Omnidiversity enabled effective assessment of vulnerable environments and has potential to benefit other holistic approaches such as the conserving nature’s stage approach and ecosystem-based management. Subsequent research could augment omnidiversity with other traditional biodiversity assessment approaches and conservation strategies, further trial in other ecosystems, and develop an optimized third-party digital application to provide greater availability for use.
format Article
id doaj-art-25ffc3a6fa4046f09f2f3cb5555fa504
institution Kabale University
issn 2645-4661
2588-7343
language English
publishDate 2022-06-01
publisher OICC Press
record_format Article
series Geoconservation Research
spelling doaj-art-25ffc3a6fa4046f09f2f3cb5555fa5042025-02-03T00:39:24ZengOICC PressGeoconservation Research2645-46612588-73432022-06-015110813410.30486/gcr.2022.1947195.1099688942Omnidiversity Consolidation of Conservation Assessment: A Case Study of Tasmanian Coastal Geoconservation SitesJake Crisp0Joanna Ellison1Andrew Fischer2Discipline of Geography and Spatial Science, School of Technology, Environments and Design, University of Tasmania, Launceston, Newnham Drive, Tasmania, 7250, AustraliaDiscipline of Geography and Spatial Science, School of Technology, Environments and Design, University of Tasmania, Launceston, Newnham Drive, Tasmania, 7250, AustraliaIMAS Ecology and Biodiversity Centre, College of Science and Engineering, University of Tasmania, IMAS Launceston, Newnham Drive, Tasmania, 7250, Launceston, TasmaniaThe exclusivity of biodiversity and geodiversity assessment hinders conservation outcomes, evidenced by the prioritization of biodiversity in conservation literature, and lagging developmental state in geodiversity assessment approaches, geoconservation strategies and outcomes. This study develops a consolidated approach, “omnidiversity”, amalgamating geodiversity and biodiversity assessment with geoconservation strategies and complementary ecological conservation criteria using ArcGIS mobile applications. ArcGIS Survey123 was adapted to assess geodiversity, biodiversity, geoconservation criteria and values. ArcGIS FieldMaps facilitated capturing the spatial location of biodiversity and geodiversity features. Three coastal geoconservation sites – Don Heads, Penguin Megabreccia, and Mersey Bluff – on the north-west coast of Tasmania were used as case studies. Results showed highest geodiversity (43.7), species richness (141) and visible interactions between geodiversity and biodiversity (120) at Don Heads geoconservation site, followed by geodiversity (40.5), species richness (107) and interactions (76) at Penguin Megabreccia site, and lowest geodiversity (7.3), species richness (89) and interactions (28) at the Mersey Bluff site. Omnidiversity showed biodiversity at Don Heads as most sensitive to geodiversity degradation attributed to extensive visible interactions, high conservation value, and the presence of sensitive species like the Little Penguin; followed by Penguin Megabreccia and Mersey Bluff coastal geoconservation sites. Omnidiversity allowed time-effective and cost-effective methods to simultaneously assess geodiversity and biodiversity, determine the harboring capacity of geodiversity for biodiversity, and facilitate conservation through unification of disparate steps into one streamlined approach. Using traditional geoconservation strategies, biodiversity values are excluded, and geodiversity elements are conserved only for their geoheritage importance. Omnidiversity enabled effective assessment of vulnerable environments and has potential to benefit other holistic approaches such as the conserving nature’s stage approach and ecosystem-based management. Subsequent research could augment omnidiversity with other traditional biodiversity assessment approaches and conservation strategies, further trial in other ecosystems, and develop an optimized third-party digital application to provide greater availability for use.https://gcr.isfahan.iau.ir/article_688942_ffc5855dc12153ac9f19f97affccff07.pdfgeodiversity assessmentbiodiversity assessmentarcgisnatural valuescoastal vegetationinvertebrates
spellingShingle Jake Crisp
Joanna Ellison
Andrew Fischer
Omnidiversity Consolidation of Conservation Assessment: A Case Study of Tasmanian Coastal Geoconservation Sites
Geoconservation Research
geodiversity assessment
biodiversity assessment
arcgis
natural values
coastal vegetation
invertebrates
title Omnidiversity Consolidation of Conservation Assessment: A Case Study of Tasmanian Coastal Geoconservation Sites
title_full Omnidiversity Consolidation of Conservation Assessment: A Case Study of Tasmanian Coastal Geoconservation Sites
title_fullStr Omnidiversity Consolidation of Conservation Assessment: A Case Study of Tasmanian Coastal Geoconservation Sites
title_full_unstemmed Omnidiversity Consolidation of Conservation Assessment: A Case Study of Tasmanian Coastal Geoconservation Sites
title_short Omnidiversity Consolidation of Conservation Assessment: A Case Study of Tasmanian Coastal Geoconservation Sites
title_sort omnidiversity consolidation of conservation assessment a case study of tasmanian coastal geoconservation sites
topic geodiversity assessment
biodiversity assessment
arcgis
natural values
coastal vegetation
invertebrates
url https://gcr.isfahan.iau.ir/article_688942_ffc5855dc12153ac9f19f97affccff07.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT jakecrisp omnidiversityconsolidationofconservationassessmentacasestudyoftasmaniancoastalgeoconservationsites
AT joannaellison omnidiversityconsolidationofconservationassessmentacasestudyoftasmaniancoastalgeoconservationsites
AT andrewfischer omnidiversityconsolidationofconservationassessmentacasestudyoftasmaniancoastalgeoconservationsites