Fixing 础耻蝉迟谤补濒颈补鈥檚 extinction crisis means thinking bigger than individual species
The world鈥檚 of biodiversity recently shared the alarming news that 1 million species are under threat of extinction.
础耻蝉迟谤补濒颈补鈥檚 is poor compared to the rest of the world, and our investment into conservation doesn鈥檛 do enough to restrain the growing crisis.
Currently, 511 animal species, 1,356 plant species and 82 distinct 鈥渆cological communities鈥 鈥 naturally groups of native plants, animals and other organisms 鈥 are listed as in Australia. And these numbers are increasing.
While much conservation effort focuses on protecting individual species, we are failing to protect and restore their habitats.
Our ongoing research into environmental investment programs shows that current do not even come close to matching what鈥檚 actually needed to downgrade threatened ecosystems.
One of the programs we evaluated was the , a part of the Australian government鈥檚 . For example, we analysed investment targeted at the critically endangered Peppermint Box Grassy Woodlands of South Australia.
Fewer than three square kilometres of woodland were planted. That鈥檚 less than 1% of what was needed to move the conservation status of these woodlands by one category, from critically endangered to endangered.
Restoring communities
Conservation efforts are often focused on species 鈥 easily understood parts of our complex and interrelated ecosystems.
In recent years, some effective measures have been put in place to conserve species that are teetering on the edge of extinction. We have, for instance, seen the appointment of a and the release of a and .
But we don鈥檛 often hear about the 82 threatened ecological communities in which many of these species live.
Temperate eucalypt woodlands once covered vast areas of southern Australia before being cleared to make way for agriculture. The Peppermint Box Grassy Woodlands of South Australia, for instance, have been reduced to 2% of their former glory through land clearing and other forms of degradation.
These woodlands provide critical habitat for many plant and animal species, among them such as the Diamond Firetail and Jacky Winter.
Focusing on the conservation and restoration of our threatened communities (rather than individual species) would create a better understanding of how much effort and investment is required to curb the and improve the outcomes of restoration.
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A problem of scale
Large-scale restoration investment programs are often touted in politics, particularly when these have a national focus. And many recent restoration programs, such as the , , and , are important and worthwhile.
But in the majority of cases the effort is inadequate to achieve the stated conservation objectives.
to the environment often remain 鈥 such as vegetation clearing, genetic isolation and competition from introduced pests and weeds 鈥 and biodiversity continues to decline.
The , for example, is the most recent national initiative aimed at restoring native vegetation systems, attracting A$70 million in investment between 2014 and 2020.
To place the scale of this investment into context, we analysed the impact of the 20 Million Trees program on the critically endangered Peppermint Box Grassy Woodlands of South Australia.
The restoration priority for this community should be to enhance the condition of existing remnant areas. But improving its conservation status would also require more effort to increase the area of land the woodland covers.
Even if the full six-year budget for 20 Million Trees (A$70 million) was used to replant only this type of woodland, it would still fall short of upgrading its conservation status to endangered. We estimate that moving the community up a category would require a minimum investment of A$150 million, excluding land value.
And Peppermint Box Grassy Woodland is just one of the threatened ecological communities listed for conservation. There are 81 others.
Although any effort to improve the status of threatened ecosystems (and species) is important, this example shows how current levels of effort and investment are to have any substantial impact on threatened communities and the species that live there.
Our estimates relate to how restoration activities affect land cover. But ensuring they are also of adequate quality would need more long-term investment.
Boosting investment
Investment in biodiversity conservation in Australia is while the extinction crisis is worsening.
Protecting and restoring ecological communities will preserve our unique native biodiversity and develop an environment that and remains . But failure to invest now will lead to extinctions and the .
To make genuine inroads and have an enduring impact on Australian threatened species and ecosystems, restoration programs must be clear on the amount they expect to contribute to conservation and restoration objectives, along with co-benefits like carbon sequestration.
The programs must be at least an and be structured to produce measurable outcomes.
Featured researcher
Centre for Global Food and Resources
Faculty of the Professions
Featured researcher
Research Associate
School of Mathematical Sciences
Faculty of Engineering, Computer and Mathematical Sciences
This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .
, Research Fellow, The Centre for Global Food and Resources, ; , Associate Professor, , and , Postdoctoral research fellow, School of Mathematical Sciences,