Journal article

Minimizing species extinctions through strategic planning for conservation fencing

JL Ringma, B Wintle, RA Fuller, D Fisher, M Bode

Conservation Biology | WILEY | Published : 2017

Abstract

Conservation fences are an increasingly common management action, particularly for species threatened by invasive predators. However, unlike many conservation actions, fence networks are expanding in an unsystematic manner, generally as a reaction to local funding opportunities or threats. We conducted a gap analysis of Australia's large predator-exclusion fence network by examining translocation of Australian mammals relative to their extinction risk. To address gaps identified in species representation, we devised a systematic prioritization method for expanding the conservation fence network that explicitly incorporated population viability analysis and minimized expected species’ extinct..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

We thank K. Brennan and members of a 2011 NERP workshop for helping to frame the prioritization idea; J. Hanson and K. Helmstedt; A. Moran-Ordonez for methods development; J. Woinarski, S. Legge, and D. Roshier; and J. Kanowksi from AWC for comments. This work was supported by the National Environment Research Program (NERP) Environmental Decisions Hub and the Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, Australian Research Council. B.W., (use full set of initials for authors) R.F., and D.F. are supported by ARC Future Fellowships, and M.B. is supported by ARC DECRA (DE130100572).