Abstract
Minimum patch size criteria for habitat protection reflect the conservation principle that a single large (SL) patch of habitat has higher biodiversity than several small (SS) patches of the same total area (SL > SS). Nonetheless, this principle is often incorrect, and biodiversity conservation requires placing more emphasis on protection of large numbers of small patches (SS > SL). We used a global database reporting the abundances of species across hundreds of patches to assess the SL > SS principle in systems where small patches are much smaller than the typical minimum patch size criteria applied for biodiversity conservation (i.e., ∼85% of patches <100 ha). The 76 metacommunities we examined included 4401 species in 1190 patches. From each metacommunity, we resampled species–area accumulation curves to evaluate how biodiversity responded to habitat existing as a few large patches or as many small patches. Counter to the SL > SS principle and consistent with previous syntheses, species richness accumulated more rapidly when adding several small patches (45.2% SS > SL vs. 19.9% SL > SS) to reach the same cumulative area, even for the very small patches in our data set. Responses of taxa to habitat fragmentation differed, which suggests that when a given total area of habitat is to be protected, overall biodiversity conservation will be most effective if that habitat is composed of as many small patches as possible, plus a few large ones. Because minimum patch size criteria often require larger patches than the small patches we examined, our results suggest that such criteria hinder efforts to protect biodiversity.
Author supplied keywords
- 2050 Vision for Biodiversity
- Post-2020 Biodiversity targets
- Visión 2050 para la Biodiversidad
- diseño de reservas
- fragmentación del hábitat
- habitat fragmentation
- landscape planning
- minimum patch area
- objetivos del Marco Mundial de Biodiversidad Post 2020
- planeación del paisaje
- reserve design
- área mínima de fragmento
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Riva, F., & Fahrig, L. (2023). Obstruction of biodiversity conservation by minimum patch size criteria. Conservation Biology, 37(5). https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.14092
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