Publications by authors named "Soto-Navarro C"

Climate adaptation corridors are widely recognized as important for promoting biodiversity resilience under climate change. Central America is part of the Mesoamerican biodiversity hotspot, but there have been no regional-scale analyses of potential climate adaptation corridors in Central America. We identified 2375 potential corridors throughout Central America that link lowland protected areas (≤ 500 m) with intact, high-elevation forests (≥ 1500 m) that represent potential climate change refugia.

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As more ambitious protected area (PA) targets for the post-2020 global biodiversity framework are set beyond Aichi Target 11, renew thinking into spatial prioritisation is required to enable PA expansion that maximises environmental values. Our study focuses on the biodiverse and forest-rich Indonesian island of Sulawesi, which has a terrestrial PA network that covers 10% of the island. We used Marxan to investigate trade-offs in the design of an expanded PA network that prioritised different conservation features (biodiversity, forest cover, carbon stock, karst and valuable metal-rich areas) under varying island-wide coverage targets (17%, 30%, and 50%).

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Article Synopsis
  • The post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework aims to stabilize and restore species status, justifying the need for a scalable metric to measure the impact of conservation actions globally.
  • The STAR (species threat abatement and restoration) metric assesses how targeted actions like habitat restoration and threat reduction can reduce extinction risks, showing significant contributions from sustainable agriculture and forestry.
  • Countries like Indonesia and Brazil hold significant responsibility for biodiversity, as they manage over 31% of the STAR values for key species, while Key Biodiversity Areas, though only 9% of land, represent nearly half of these values.
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Integrated high-resolution maps of carbon stocks and biodiversity that identify areas of potential co-benefits for climate change mitigation and biodiversity conservation can help facilitate the implementation of global climate and biodiversity commitments at local levels. However, the multi-dimensional nature of biodiversity presents a major challenge for understanding, mapping and communicating where and how biodiversity benefits coincide with climate benefits. A new integrated approach to biodiversity is therefore needed.

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