Conservation covenants on private land: issues with measuring and achieving biodiversity outcomes in Australia.

Environ Manage

The Nature Conservancy, Suite 2-01, 60 Leicester Street, Carlton, VIC, 3053, Australia,

Published: September 2014

Conservation covenants and easements have become essential tools to secure biodiversity outcomes on private land, and to assist in meeting international protection targets. In Australia, the number and spatial area of conservation covenants has grown significantly in the past decade. Yet there has been little research or detailed policy analysis of conservation covenanting in Australia. We sought to determine how conservation covenanting agencies were measuring the biodiversity conservation outcomes achieved on covenanted properties, and factors inhibiting or contributing to measuring these outcomes. In addition, we also investigated the drivers and constraints associated with actually delivering the biodiversity outcomes, drawing on detailed input from covenanting programs. Although all conservation covenanting programs had the broad aim of maintaining or improving biodiversity in their covenants in the long term, the specific stated objectives of conservation covenanting programs varied. Programs undertook monitoring and evaluation in different ways and at different spatial and temporal scales. Thus, it was difficult to determine the extent Australian conservation covenanting agencies were measuring the biodiversity conservation outcomes achieved on covenanted properties on a national scale. Lack of time available to covenantors to undertake management was one of the biggest impediments to achieving biodiversity conservation outcomes. A lack of financial resources and human capital to monitor, knowing what to monitor, inconsistent monitoring methodologies, a lack of benchmark data, and length of time to achieve outcomes were all considered potential barriers to monitoring the biodiversity conservation outcomes of conservation covenants.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-014-0329-4DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

conservation covenanting
20
conservation covenants
16
biodiversity conservation
16
conservation outcomes
16
conservation
13
biodiversity outcomes
12
covenanting programs
12
outcomes
9
private land
8
biodiversity
8

Similar Publications

Maintaining landholder satisfaction and management of private protected areas established under conservation agreements.

J Environ Manage

March 2022

School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Wellington Road, Clayton, VIC, 3800, Australia.

Permanent protection of biodiversity on private lands is achieved through various mechanisms around the world. In Australia, conservation covenants are widely used to dedicate private lands to biodiversity conservation. The permanency of covenants necessitates similarly long-term commitment by landholders to meet and maintain the conservation obligations under the covenant.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Conservation covenants on private land: issues with measuring and achieving biodiversity outcomes in Australia.

Environ Manage

September 2014

The Nature Conservancy, Suite 2-01, 60 Leicester Street, Carlton, VIC, 3053, Australia,

Conservation covenants and easements have become essential tools to secure biodiversity outcomes on private land, and to assist in meeting international protection targets. In Australia, the number and spatial area of conservation covenants has grown significantly in the past decade. Yet there has been little research or detailed policy analysis of conservation covenanting in Australia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Placing the power of real options analysis into the hands of natural resource managers - taking the next step.

J Environ Manage

July 2013

CSIRO Climate Adaptation Flagship, GPO Box 284, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.

This paper explores heuristic methods with potential to place the analytical power of real options analysis into the hands of natural resource managers. The complexity of real options analysis has led to patchy or ephemeral adoption even by corporate managers familiar with the financial-market origins of valuation methods. Intuitively accessible methods for estimating the value of real options have begun to evolve, but their evaluation has mostly been limited to researcher-driven applications.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!