Publication | Closed Access
The role of landscape connectivity in planning and implementing conservation and restoration priorities
327
Citations
4
References
2012
Year
Unknown Venue
Biodiversity LossEngineeringLand UseLandscape ArchitectureRestoration PrioritiesEnvironmental PlanningConservation PlanningLandscape ConnectivitySocial SciencesConservation BiologyClimate ChangeLand Use PlanningBiodiversityLandscape PlanningGeographyLandscape EcologyHabitat LossBiodiversity ConservationEvolutionary BiologyRange Shift
Landscape connectivity, the extent to which a landscape facilitates the movements of organisms and their genes, faces critical threats from both fragmentation and habitat loss. Many conservation efforts focus on protecting and enhancing connectivity to offset the impacts of habitat loss and fragmentation on biodiversity conservation, and to increase the resilience of reserve networks to potential threats associated with climate change. Loss of connectivity can reduce the size and quality of available habitat, impede and disrupt movement (including dispersal) to new habitats, and affect seasonal migration patterns. These changes can lead, in turn, to detrimental effects for populations and species, including decreased carrying capacity, population declines, loss of genetic variation, and ultimately species extinction.
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