2022
DOI: 10.1002/2688-8319.12142
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A roadmap for sustaining biodiversity and ecosystem services through joint conservation and restoration of northern drainage basins

Abstract: 1. Freshwater ecosystems and their biota are more seriously threatened than their marine and terrestrial counterparts. A solution to halt increasing negative impacts of anthropogenic development would be to reconsider the basics of nature conservation (i.e. protection of pristine and near-pristine areas) and restoration (i.e. returning an impacted site to as natural condition as possible) through inclusion of the knowledge on abiotic and biotic dynamics of rivers draining pristine catchments. In boreal and Arc… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, PAs for freshwater ecosystems should be more diverse in form (e.g., designing based on objectives, catchment zoning, classifying PAs into different protection levels, and OECMs) and integrated with each other to optimize multiobjective achievements (Hermoso et al., 2018; IUCN–WCPA, 2019; Higgins et al., 2021). Alternatively, strengthening the effectiveness of existing PAs through multiple measures (e.g., funding, staffing, and equipping) and restorations (e.g., river habitat rehabilitation, and connectivity restoration) is also important (Coad et al., 2019; Heino & Koljonen, 2022) in cases where expanding PAs is difficult or where it is not possible to meet the expected PA coverage requirements.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Therefore, PAs for freshwater ecosystems should be more diverse in form (e.g., designing based on objectives, catchment zoning, classifying PAs into different protection levels, and OECMs) and integrated with each other to optimize multiobjective achievements (Hermoso et al., 2018; IUCN–WCPA, 2019; Higgins et al., 2021). Alternatively, strengthening the effectiveness of existing PAs through multiple measures (e.g., funding, staffing, and equipping) and restorations (e.g., river habitat rehabilitation, and connectivity restoration) is also important (Coad et al., 2019; Heino & Koljonen, 2022) in cases where expanding PAs is difficult or where it is not possible to meet the expected PA coverage requirements.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Identifying areas where anthropogenic activity affects biodiversity is also important for conservation planning, including the identification of areas requiring strict protection and restoration (Heino & Koljonen, 2022). Therefore, we assessed the spatial overlap between anthropogenic disturbances and fish occurrence by correlating biodiversity facets with the human footprint index (HFI), which is the best available index for indicating the intensity of anthropogenic disturbances at the same spatial resolution as our fish data (i.e., 1‐km 2 cell).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, variations in turnover and nestedness of both TD β and FD β were structured by environmental variables and spatial factors, respectively. Therefore, improving regional diversity might be feasible by maintaining environmental heterogeneity in terms of water chemistry and river morphology (Heino & Koljonen, 2022), along with adequate habitat connectivity (López‐Delgado et al, 2020). Overall, our results emphasise the need to consider multiple facets of β ‐diversity partitioning when developing suitable conservation plans.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to our findings, more emphasis should be placed on water governance that recognises the variety of local social-ecological systems. Similarly, Heino and Koljonen (2022) argue that the policy instruments should recognise that river ecosystems are spatially and temporally dynamic metasystems. This requires further thinking based squarely on the hydro-social cycle (Swyngedouw 2002;Linton & Budds 2014), as this makes it possible to steer the socio-ecological system towards better recognition of biodiversity, societal and cultural values and adaptation needs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%