Comparing the performance of three satellite-based data products for assessing protected area effectiveness

Protected areas (PAs) play a key role in tackling the ongoing biodiversity crisis, but there is a lack of sufficient information about how effectively they can mitigate different land-use pressures, such as deforestation and wildfires. The majority of studies assessing PA effectiveness have so far f...

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Main Authors: Saija Papunen, Johanna Eklund
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024-08-01
Series:Global Ecology and Conservation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989424001586
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author Saija Papunen
Johanna Eklund
author_facet Saija Papunen
Johanna Eklund
author_sort Saija Papunen
collection DOAJ
description Protected areas (PAs) play a key role in tackling the ongoing biodiversity crisis, but there is a lack of sufficient information about how effectively they can mitigate different land-use pressures, such as deforestation and wildfires. The majority of studies assessing PA effectiveness have so far focused on forest loss as a proxy, finding that PAs in general reduce tropical deforestation pressures. However, data on the spread and incidents of fires could provide an interesting alternative, since several high-quality, open-access fire data products have lately become available at high spatial and temporal resolution. In this study, we compare how three satellite-based data products (forest loss, fire incidence, burned area) affect the results and conclusions of a matching-based analysis of the effectiveness of the PAs of Madagascar, a global biodiversity hotspot. We also compare the data products´ spatial and temporal resolution, the timespan they cover, and how user-friendly the downloading and pre-processing stages are. We found that Madagascar’s PAs have the capacity to mitigate forest conversion pressures, irrespective of which data product is used as a proxy for effectiveness. However, the level of effectiveness varies between the main forest biomes, and there is significant variation in the effectiveness between individual PAs. Overall, our results indicate that satellite-based fire data can potentially be used to a much greater extent for assessing future PA performance, especially when seeing that their high temporal resolution makes them particularly relevant for practical management purposes.
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spelling doaj.art-e349fe99cb0842998807d9e4894f6bd82024-05-22T04:21:55ZengElsevierGlobal Ecology and Conservation2351-98942024-08-0152e02954Comparing the performance of three satellite-based data products for assessing protected area effectivenessSaija Papunen0Johanna Eklund1Department of Forest Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry, University of Helsinki, Finland; Correspondence to: Dept. of Forest Sciences, University of Helsinki, Latokartanonkaari 7, PL 27, FI-00014, Finland.Department of Geosciences and Geography, Faculty of Science, University of Helsinki, FinlandProtected areas (PAs) play a key role in tackling the ongoing biodiversity crisis, but there is a lack of sufficient information about how effectively they can mitigate different land-use pressures, such as deforestation and wildfires. The majority of studies assessing PA effectiveness have so far focused on forest loss as a proxy, finding that PAs in general reduce tropical deforestation pressures. However, data on the spread and incidents of fires could provide an interesting alternative, since several high-quality, open-access fire data products have lately become available at high spatial and temporal resolution. In this study, we compare how three satellite-based data products (forest loss, fire incidence, burned area) affect the results and conclusions of a matching-based analysis of the effectiveness of the PAs of Madagascar, a global biodiversity hotspot. We also compare the data products´ spatial and temporal resolution, the timespan they cover, and how user-friendly the downloading and pre-processing stages are. We found that Madagascar’s PAs have the capacity to mitigate forest conversion pressures, irrespective of which data product is used as a proxy for effectiveness. However, the level of effectiveness varies between the main forest biomes, and there is significant variation in the effectiveness between individual PAs. Overall, our results indicate that satellite-based fire data can potentially be used to a much greater extent for assessing future PA performance, especially when seeing that their high temporal resolution makes them particularly relevant for practical management purposes.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989424001586DeforestationWildfiresTropical forestsImpact evaluationProtected areas
spellingShingle Saija Papunen
Johanna Eklund
Comparing the performance of three satellite-based data products for assessing protected area effectiveness
Global Ecology and Conservation
Deforestation
Wildfires
Tropical forests
Impact evaluation
Protected areas
title Comparing the performance of three satellite-based data products for assessing protected area effectiveness
title_full Comparing the performance of three satellite-based data products for assessing protected area effectiveness
title_fullStr Comparing the performance of three satellite-based data products for assessing protected area effectiveness
title_full_unstemmed Comparing the performance of three satellite-based data products for assessing protected area effectiveness
title_short Comparing the performance of three satellite-based data products for assessing protected area effectiveness
title_sort comparing the performance of three satellite based data products for assessing protected area effectiveness
topic Deforestation
Wildfires
Tropical forests
Impact evaluation
Protected areas
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989424001586
work_keys_str_mv AT saijapapunen comparingtheperformanceofthreesatellitebaseddataproductsforassessingprotectedareaeffectiveness
AT johannaeklund comparingtheperformanceofthreesatellitebaseddataproductsforassessingprotectedareaeffectiveness