Publication | Closed Access
Whose backyard? Some precautions in choosing recipient sites for assisted colonisation of <scp>A</scp>ustralian plants and animals
13
Citations
39
References
2013
Year
EngineeringEx-situ ConservationRecipient SiteWhose BackyardAgricultural EconomicsConservation PlanningSocial SciencesInvasive SpecieBiogeographySite SelectionBiodiversity ProtectionConservation BiologyApplied Plant EcologyBiodiversityHabitat ConservationAssisted ColonisationNature ConservationBiodiversity ConservationEvolutionary BiologyNatural Resource ManagementRecipient SitesAnthropologyLand Conservation
Summary In cases where assisted colonisation is the appropriate conservation tool, the selection of recipient sites is a major challenge. Here, we propose a framework for site selection that can be applied to the Australian biota, where planning for assisted colonisation is in its infancy. Characteristics that will be important drivers in the decision‐making process include the size of a recipient site, the potential to augment corridors and respond to niche gaps, the maximisation of climatic buffering, bioregional similarity, tenure security, and the minimisation of opportunities for hybridisation and invasiveness. Sites we suggest be precluded from assisted colonisation include sites of high species endemism, IUCN category 1 reference reserves and fully‐functioning threatened ecological communities.
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