Artículos de revistas
Conservation network design for endemic cacti under taxonomic uncertainty
Fecha
2014Registro en:
Biological Conservation 176 (2014) 236–242
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2014.05.028
Autor
Duarte, Milén
Guerrero, Pablo C.
Carvallo, Gastón
Bustamante Araya, Ramiro
Institución
Resumen
The utility of spatial conservation prioritization (SCP), could be limited by the biases produced by
taxonomic uncertainty and by the lack of an accepted taxonomic checklist for a diverse group of species.
Using information on the endemic cacti of the Atacama Desert and Mediterranean Chile, we assessed the
implications for SCP of the existence of two contrasting taxonomies. Biological and socioeconomic criteria
were combined to design conservation networks for two widely used taxonomic checklists of endemic
Chilean cacti. We analyzed the spatial distribution of these conservation networks to assess the congruence
of the taxonomic checklists and evaluated whether our models match the geographic distribution of
the National System of Protected Areas. The conservation networks had low similarity. However, consensus
scenarios revealed several coincident priority sites. Gap analyses indicated that one-third of the species
were completely unprotected but that all species were satisfactorily protected in the consensus
scenario. Consensus scenarios based on different checklists can improve SCP because this approach is less
affected by taxonomic uncertainty. It is more conservative (without a priori taxonomic decisions) and
robust (priority sites are supported by more than one scenario). Given the narrow distribution of cacti,
effective conservation actions demand environmental actions in a geographically explicit framework.