Private protected areas exhibit greater bias towards unproductive land compared to public protected areas

Globally, private protected areas (PPAs) have become an important tool for biodiversity conservation. While they are expanding in size and number, there is limited evidence on their potential impact on avoiding biodiversity loss, and how this impact compares to the public protected areas (public PAs...

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Main Authors: Roshan Sharma, Simon Jones, Lucy Bastin, Ascelin Gordon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2025-01-01
Series:Environmental Research Communications
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1088/2515-7620/adc546
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author Roshan Sharma
Simon Jones
Lucy Bastin
Ascelin Gordon
author_facet Roshan Sharma
Simon Jones
Lucy Bastin
Ascelin Gordon
author_sort Roshan Sharma
collection DOAJ
description Globally, private protected areas (PPAs) have become an important tool for biodiversity conservation. While they are expanding in size and number, there is limited evidence on their potential impact on avoiding biodiversity loss, and how this impact compares to the public protected areas (public PAs). The impact of protection is measured as the actual biodiversity outcome within the area protected relative to the hypothetical outcome without protection. To maximise this positive impact, PAs need to be placed strategically on land that both harbours biodiversity and would be at risk of losing some of the biodiversity if it were not protected. We evaluate and compare the locations of PPAs and public PAs relative to random sites of similar governance type, and a range of covariates that capture biodiversity and the risk of biodiversity loss. We utilised data from a national PA database, and high-resolution data on nationally significant threatened species and indicators that capture risk of biodiversity loss at a continental scale in Australia. We find that PPAs tend to target areas of high threatened species richness. However, on average, PPAs are placed in areas that have lower risk of being cleared compared to randomly selected private land. We observe that this bias towards unproductive land is more prominent in PPAs when compared to public PAs. As nations work towards effectively conserving and managing at least 30% of the world’s lands by 2030 under the new Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, it becomes essential to prioritise PAs and PPAs that deliver impacts on avoiding biodiversity loss rather than solely focusing on areas that represent biodiversity.
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spelling doaj-art-ff4aeee8ea754b6c96e8812e768c0c232025-08-20T03:05:49ZengIOP PublishingEnvironmental Research Communications2515-76202025-01-017404100310.1088/2515-7620/adc546Private protected areas exhibit greater bias towards unproductive land compared to public protected areasRoshan Sharma0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1622-5875Simon Jones1Lucy Bastin2https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1321-0800Ascelin Gordon3School of Global Urban and Social Sciences, RMIT University , Australia; School of Biological Sciences, Monash University , AustraliaSchool of Science, RMIT University , AustraliaSchool of Computer Science and Digital Technologies, Aston University , United KingdomSchool of Global Urban and Social Sciences, RMIT University , AustraliaGlobally, private protected areas (PPAs) have become an important tool for biodiversity conservation. While they are expanding in size and number, there is limited evidence on their potential impact on avoiding biodiversity loss, and how this impact compares to the public protected areas (public PAs). The impact of protection is measured as the actual biodiversity outcome within the area protected relative to the hypothetical outcome without protection. To maximise this positive impact, PAs need to be placed strategically on land that both harbours biodiversity and would be at risk of losing some of the biodiversity if it were not protected. We evaluate and compare the locations of PPAs and public PAs relative to random sites of similar governance type, and a range of covariates that capture biodiversity and the risk of biodiversity loss. We utilised data from a national PA database, and high-resolution data on nationally significant threatened species and indicators that capture risk of biodiversity loss at a continental scale in Australia. We find that PPAs tend to target areas of high threatened species richness. However, on average, PPAs are placed in areas that have lower risk of being cleared compared to randomly selected private land. We observe that this bias towards unproductive land is more prominent in PPAs when compared to public PAs. As nations work towards effectively conserving and managing at least 30% of the world’s lands by 2030 under the new Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, it becomes essential to prioritise PAs and PPAs that deliver impacts on avoiding biodiversity loss rather than solely focusing on areas that represent biodiversity.https://doi.org/10.1088/2515-7620/adc546biodiversity conservationland suitabilityland use biasthreatened speciesprotected areasconservation impact
spellingShingle Roshan Sharma
Simon Jones
Lucy Bastin
Ascelin Gordon
Private protected areas exhibit greater bias towards unproductive land compared to public protected areas
Environmental Research Communications
biodiversity conservation
land suitability
land use bias
threatened species
protected areas
conservation impact
title Private protected areas exhibit greater bias towards unproductive land compared to public protected areas
title_full Private protected areas exhibit greater bias towards unproductive land compared to public protected areas
title_fullStr Private protected areas exhibit greater bias towards unproductive land compared to public protected areas
title_full_unstemmed Private protected areas exhibit greater bias towards unproductive land compared to public protected areas
title_short Private protected areas exhibit greater bias towards unproductive land compared to public protected areas
title_sort private protected areas exhibit greater bias towards unproductive land compared to public protected areas
topic biodiversity conservation
land suitability
land use bias
threatened species
protected areas
conservation impact
url https://doi.org/10.1088/2515-7620/adc546
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AT lucybastin privateprotectedareasexhibitgreaterbiastowardsunproductivelandcomparedtopublicprotectedareas
AT ascelingordon privateprotectedareasexhibitgreaterbiastowardsunproductivelandcomparedtopublicprotectedareas