Title: Evaluation of habitats for nature conservation
1Evaluation of habitats for nature conservation
- To a greater extent than ever before, habitats
and species are threatened. - Conservation will increasingly be required and
involve - - designation of sites for various degrees of
protection - - implementation of management plans
- How do you select a site for conservation?
- Not all habitats can be conserved, and some
habitats can be afforded greater priority for
conservation than others. - This lecture introduces a number of important
criteria that are used in assessing the
conservation value of a site.
2Anglesey is a large (72,000 ha) island off the
north coast of Wales
- Lakes and reedbeds
- support the greatest number of breeding wildfowl
in Wales - lime-rich fens are unique in Wales
- wildlife and plant communities rare or absent
elsewhere in Wales - Wet pastures scattered across the farmland still
provide food and breeding sites for wading birds.
3Cors Erddreiniog 289-hectare SSSI, includes a
190-hectare National Nature Reserve and is the
largest fen in Wales. Black bog rush Schoenus
nigricans Blunt flowered rush, Juncus
subnodulosus Great fen sedge Cladium mariscus
Fly orchid Ophrys insectifera Marsh gentian
Gentiana pneumonanthe, Southern damselfly
Coenagrion mercuriale at its most northerly
location
4Llyn Rhos-dduThis shallow lake is dammed by the
Newborough Warren sand dune system and is part of
that National Nature Reserve. The lake supports a
good range of aquatic plants and animals
including mare's-tail Hippuris vulgaris. Water
level was accidentally lowered about 0.6 metres
some years ago. The AWS group has helped to
install a sluice, being used to restore the water
level.
5Snowdonia
Purple saxifrage Saxifraga oppositifolia
Snowdon lily Lloydia serotina
Chough
Rainbow beetle
6What features make a site of conservation value?
- Size
- Diversity
- Naturalness
- Rarity
- Fragility
- Typicalness
- Recorded history
- Position in ecological unit
- Potential for improvement/restoration
7A word of caution...
- These criteria are not definitive
- they are not strictly independent, or all
necessary for consideration all of the time - they are not entirely objective
- there are frequent exceptions
- HOWEVER
- they are intended to stimulate a comprehensive
evaluation - they provide a structured evaluation process
- they are widely and, with experience, reliably
used
8What features make a site of conservation value?
- Size
- Diversity
- Naturalness
- Rarity
- Fragility
- Typicalness
- Recorded history
- Position in ecological unit
- Potential for improvement/restoration
9Size
- landscape suffers from severe fragmentation of
natural habitat - A general ecological rule is that larger habitats
contain proportionally more species than smaller
habitats - species population sizes tend to be larger in
larger habitats - But size isnt everything!
- Small areas may be of high quality/very rare
habitat - a small habitat may have a high proportion of the
local, national, or international population of a
species
10What features make a site of conservation value?
- Size
- Diversity
- Naturalness
- Rarity
- Fragility
- Typicalness
- Recorded history
- Position in ecological unit
- Potential for improvement/restoration
11Diversity
- Physical, habitat, species and community
diversity - Usually, higher diversity is better
- e.g. calcareous grasslands gt50 species m-2
- improved grassland 2 species m-2
- However, diversity can be high, but of poor
conservation value - Diversity is related to a number of different
processes, and need to identify such processes
that are important at a site
12What features make a site of conservation value?
- Size
- Diversity
- Naturalness
- Rarity
- Fragility
- Typicalness
- Recorded history
- Position in ecological unit
- Potential for improvement/restoration
13Naturalness
- More natural implies
- of greater conservation value
- absence of human interference (relative!)
- a natural habitat can change over time
(succession, env. conditions) - Need to consider
- presence of introduced species
- how the habitat differs from other less disturbed
habitats - can the habitat be maintained/improved
- is another species dependent on it
- Greenland whitefront goose favours grazing on
improved grassland, the latter being of low
intrinsic conservation value
14What features make a site of conservation value?
- Size
- Diversity
- Naturalness
- Rarity
- Fragility
- Typicalness
- Recorded history
- Position in ecological unit
- Potential for improvement/restoration
15Rarity
- Establish the wider distribution of a rare
species/habitat - local, regional, national, international?
- Why is it rare?
- Limit of geographical distribution
- relict populations (e.g. Arctic alpine flora)
- specialised local requirements
- Is it likely to continue to survive? (long-term
viability)
16What features make a site of conservation value?
- Size
- Diversity
- Naturalness
- Rarity
- Fragility
- Typicalness
- Recorded history
- Position in ecological unit
- Potential for improvement/restoration
17Fragility
- the degree of sensitivity of habitats,
communities, and species to environmental change,
and so involves a combination of intrinsic and
extrinsic features (Ratcliffe 1977) - Succession natural dynamics of vegetation
turnover - Anthropogenic disturbances
- how serious is the disturbance? (extent of
damage) - how likely is recovery?
- Underlying causes of fragility?
- Viability?
- Within what timescale?
18What features make a site of conservation value?
- Size
- Diversity
- Naturalness
- Rarity
- Fragility
- Typicalness
- Recorded history
- Position in ecological unit
- Potential for improvement/restoration
19Typicalness
- Sites can be selected and valued because tjhey
represent the best example of a particular
habitat (which may not be threatened). - What is the typical landform/habitat/community
for an area? - what are the typical species for a
habitat/community?
20What features make a site of conservation value?
- Size
- Diversity
- Naturalness
- Rarity
- Fragility
- Typicalness
- Recorded history
- Position in ecological unit
- Potential for improvement/restoration
21Recorded historyPosition in ecological unit
- Habitat value may be enhanced if their history
and management is known, for the management of
one site, and understanding of others. - Availability and quality of scientific and land
use records - availability of accessible natural evidence
- pollen record in peat bogs
- relevance of records to value of the features
- Position in ecological unit
- most obvious example is offshore island
- reflects isolation, fragmentation, size of unit,
buffer area, quality of buffer area, land use
around habitat
22What features make a site of conservation value?
- Size
- Diversity
- Naturalness
- Rarity
- Fragility
- Typicalness
- Recorded history
- Position in ecological unit
- Potential for improvement/restoration
23Potential for improvement/restoration
- Reflects isolation, fragmentation, size of unit,
buffer area, quality of buffer area, land use
around habitat - Habitats are usually imperfect
- Need to assess the potential for improvement
- can there be total recovery?
- Will partial recovery be adequate?
- e.g. removal of weeds, Rhododendron
- removal of exotic predators
24What features make a site of conservation value?
- Size
- Diversity
- Naturalness
- Rarity
- Fragility
- Typicalness
- Recorded history
- Position in ecological unit
- Potential for improvement/restoration
25Summary
- 639.9-SPE. Evaluation and assessment for
conservation ecological guidelines for
determining priorities for nature conservation.
Spellerberg Ian F. - Goldsmith. Monitoring for conservation and
ecology.