The Effectiveness of Protected Areas in Conserving Globally Threatened Western Tragopan Tragopan melanocephalus

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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The Effectiveness of Protected Areas in Conserving Globally Threatened Western Tragopan Tragopan melanocephalus. / Awan, Muhammad Naeem; Geldmann, Jonas; Buner, Francis; Saqib, Zafeer; Pervez, Arshid; Mahmood, Qaisar; Hashem, Abeer; Al-Arjani, Al-Bandari Fahad; Alqarawi, Abdulaziz A.; Abd Allah, Elsayed Fathi; Akbar, Tahir Ali.

In: Animals, Vol. 11, No. 3, 680, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Awan, MN, Geldmann, J, Buner, F, Saqib, Z, Pervez, A, Mahmood, Q, Hashem, A, Al-Arjani, A-BF, Alqarawi, AA, Abd Allah, EF & Akbar, TA 2021, 'The Effectiveness of Protected Areas in Conserving Globally Threatened Western Tragopan Tragopan melanocephalus', Animals, vol. 11, no. 3, 680. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11030680

APA

Awan, M. N., Geldmann, J., Buner, F., Saqib, Z., Pervez, A., Mahmood, Q., Hashem, A., Al-Arjani, A-B. F., Alqarawi, A. A., Abd Allah, E. F., & Akbar, T. A. (2021). The Effectiveness of Protected Areas in Conserving Globally Threatened Western Tragopan Tragopan melanocephalus. Animals, 11(3), [680]. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11030680

Vancouver

Awan MN, Geldmann J, Buner F, Saqib Z, Pervez A, Mahmood Q et al. The Effectiveness of Protected Areas in Conserving Globally Threatened Western Tragopan Tragopan melanocephalus. Animals. 2021;11(3). 680. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11030680

Author

Awan, Muhammad Naeem ; Geldmann, Jonas ; Buner, Francis ; Saqib, Zafeer ; Pervez, Arshid ; Mahmood, Qaisar ; Hashem, Abeer ; Al-Arjani, Al-Bandari Fahad ; Alqarawi, Abdulaziz A. ; Abd Allah, Elsayed Fathi ; Akbar, Tahir Ali. / The Effectiveness of Protected Areas in Conserving Globally Threatened Western Tragopan Tragopan melanocephalus. In: Animals. 2021 ; Vol. 11, No. 3.

Bibtex

@article{13ca2b5098814acabfb7d29dbba9fba8,
title = "The Effectiveness of Protected Areas in Conserving Globally Threatened Western Tragopan Tragopan melanocephalus",
abstract = "Simple SummaryWestern Tragopan is a globally threatened pheasant species of the Western Himalayan Biodiversity Hotspot, whereas protected areas are tools used to protect species and their habitat. In this study, we selected protected areas falling within the potential habitat of the Western Tragopan and evaluated their management effectiveness to understand their role in the protection of the pheasants of global conservation concern. Our results show that only Machiara National Park scored just above 40% (indicating relatively weak management), 22 of the PAs fell within the 25-50% quantile (indicating weak management), and 3 scored below 25% (indicating poor management). PAs within the species distributional range covered 92,387 ha which is only 2% of the total potential habitat of the tragopan. Thus, we concluded that protected areas are not sufficiently contributing to protecting species and its habitat and need to revise their plans. We further recommended establishment of more protected areas within the potential habitat of the species to help protect this iconic species of Western Himalaya.Protected areas are a critical tool to conserve biodiversity in the face of the global crisis of species extinction. Here, we present the first ever management effectiveness assessment of Pakistan's Protected Areas (PAs). We link these assessments to the delivery of conservation outcomes focusing on the threatened Western Tragopan (Tragopan melanocephalus) endemic to Pakistan and India. We used two approaches, first mapping the spatial distribution of potential habitat coverage using machine learning ensemble models and second, an assessment of the management effectiveness of protected areas. Our results show that only Machiara National Park scored just above 40% (indicating relatively weak management), 22 of the PAs fell within the 25-50% quantile (indicating weak management), and 3 scored below 25% (indicating poor management). PAs within the species distributional range covered 92,387 ha which is only 2% of the total potential habitat of the Tragopan. Scoring of Planning element was insufficient both in term of the site and species. Likewise, inputs (e.g., research and monitoring program, staff numbers, staff training, current budget, security of budget, and management after process) were also inadequate. Finally, we recommend the establishment of more protected areas within the species potential habitat and inclusion of species-specific plans in Pakistan's PAs management.",
keywords = "western tragopan, protected areas management, conservation, western himalaya, Pakistan",
author = "Awan, {Muhammad Naeem} and Jonas Geldmann and Francis Buner and Zafeer Saqib and Arshid Pervez and Qaisar Mahmood and Abeer Hashem and Al-Arjani, {Al-Bandari Fahad} and Alqarawi, {Abdulaziz A.} and {Abd Allah}, {Elsayed Fathi} and Akbar, {Tahir Ali}",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.3390/ani11030680",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
journal = "Animals",
issn = "2076-2615",
publisher = "MDPI",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Effectiveness of Protected Areas in Conserving Globally Threatened Western Tragopan Tragopan melanocephalus

AU - Awan, Muhammad Naeem

AU - Geldmann, Jonas

AU - Buner, Francis

AU - Saqib, Zafeer

AU - Pervez, Arshid

AU - Mahmood, Qaisar

AU - Hashem, Abeer

AU - Al-Arjani, Al-Bandari Fahad

AU - Alqarawi, Abdulaziz A.

AU - Abd Allah, Elsayed Fathi

AU - Akbar, Tahir Ali

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Simple SummaryWestern Tragopan is a globally threatened pheasant species of the Western Himalayan Biodiversity Hotspot, whereas protected areas are tools used to protect species and their habitat. In this study, we selected protected areas falling within the potential habitat of the Western Tragopan and evaluated their management effectiveness to understand their role in the protection of the pheasants of global conservation concern. Our results show that only Machiara National Park scored just above 40% (indicating relatively weak management), 22 of the PAs fell within the 25-50% quantile (indicating weak management), and 3 scored below 25% (indicating poor management). PAs within the species distributional range covered 92,387 ha which is only 2% of the total potential habitat of the tragopan. Thus, we concluded that protected areas are not sufficiently contributing to protecting species and its habitat and need to revise their plans. We further recommended establishment of more protected areas within the potential habitat of the species to help protect this iconic species of Western Himalaya.Protected areas are a critical tool to conserve biodiversity in the face of the global crisis of species extinction. Here, we present the first ever management effectiveness assessment of Pakistan's Protected Areas (PAs). We link these assessments to the delivery of conservation outcomes focusing on the threatened Western Tragopan (Tragopan melanocephalus) endemic to Pakistan and India. We used two approaches, first mapping the spatial distribution of potential habitat coverage using machine learning ensemble models and second, an assessment of the management effectiveness of protected areas. Our results show that only Machiara National Park scored just above 40% (indicating relatively weak management), 22 of the PAs fell within the 25-50% quantile (indicating weak management), and 3 scored below 25% (indicating poor management). PAs within the species distributional range covered 92,387 ha which is only 2% of the total potential habitat of the Tragopan. Scoring of Planning element was insufficient both in term of the site and species. Likewise, inputs (e.g., research and monitoring program, staff numbers, staff training, current budget, security of budget, and management after process) were also inadequate. Finally, we recommend the establishment of more protected areas within the species potential habitat and inclusion of species-specific plans in Pakistan's PAs management.

AB - Simple SummaryWestern Tragopan is a globally threatened pheasant species of the Western Himalayan Biodiversity Hotspot, whereas protected areas are tools used to protect species and their habitat. In this study, we selected protected areas falling within the potential habitat of the Western Tragopan and evaluated their management effectiveness to understand their role in the protection of the pheasants of global conservation concern. Our results show that only Machiara National Park scored just above 40% (indicating relatively weak management), 22 of the PAs fell within the 25-50% quantile (indicating weak management), and 3 scored below 25% (indicating poor management). PAs within the species distributional range covered 92,387 ha which is only 2% of the total potential habitat of the tragopan. Thus, we concluded that protected areas are not sufficiently contributing to protecting species and its habitat and need to revise their plans. We further recommended establishment of more protected areas within the potential habitat of the species to help protect this iconic species of Western Himalaya.Protected areas are a critical tool to conserve biodiversity in the face of the global crisis of species extinction. Here, we present the first ever management effectiveness assessment of Pakistan's Protected Areas (PAs). We link these assessments to the delivery of conservation outcomes focusing on the threatened Western Tragopan (Tragopan melanocephalus) endemic to Pakistan and India. We used two approaches, first mapping the spatial distribution of potential habitat coverage using machine learning ensemble models and second, an assessment of the management effectiveness of protected areas. Our results show that only Machiara National Park scored just above 40% (indicating relatively weak management), 22 of the PAs fell within the 25-50% quantile (indicating weak management), and 3 scored below 25% (indicating poor management). PAs within the species distributional range covered 92,387 ha which is only 2% of the total potential habitat of the Tragopan. Scoring of Planning element was insufficient both in term of the site and species. Likewise, inputs (e.g., research and monitoring program, staff numbers, staff training, current budget, security of budget, and management after process) were also inadequate. Finally, we recommend the establishment of more protected areas within the species potential habitat and inclusion of species-specific plans in Pakistan's PAs management.

KW - western tragopan

KW - protected areas management

KW - conservation

KW - western himalaya

KW - Pakistan

U2 - 10.3390/ani11030680

DO - 10.3390/ani11030680

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 33806298

VL - 11

JO - Animals

JF - Animals

SN - 2076-2615

IS - 3

M1 - 680

ER -

ID: 272259750