2020
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aaz9619
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Road development in Asia: Assessing the range-wide risks to tigers

Abstract: Roads are proliferating worldwide at an unprecedented rate, with potentially severe impacts on wildlife. We calculated the extent and potential impacts of road networks across the 1,160,000-km2, 13-country range of the globally endangered tiger (Panthera tigris)—a conservation umbrella species. We found that roads were pervasive, totaling 134,000 km across tiger conservation landscapes (TCLs), even in tiger priority sites and protected areas. Approximately 43% of the area where tiger breeding occurs and 57% of… Show more

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Cited by 43 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…The U.K. Government's commitment to rapid housing expansion (Prime Minister's Office, 2020), alongside promises to avert further wildlife declines, illustrates the urgent need for effective EMC to reconcile these goals. If measures fail to mitigate impacts of development on protected species, the impacts of ambitious construction programmes could greatly exacerbate population declines (Carter et al., 2020; Clarke et al., 2013; Torres et al., 2016). However, there was insufficient evidence for their ability of nearly half of EMC measures to compensate for impacts of developments.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The U.K. Government's commitment to rapid housing expansion (Prime Minister's Office, 2020), alongside promises to avert further wildlife declines, illustrates the urgent need for effective EMC to reconcile these goals. If measures fail to mitigate impacts of development on protected species, the impacts of ambitious construction programmes could greatly exacerbate population declines (Carter et al., 2020; Clarke et al., 2013; Torres et al., 2016). However, there was insufficient evidence for their ability of nearly half of EMC measures to compensate for impacts of developments.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ubiquitous presence of road networks causes negative effects on mammal populations up to 5-km [75], strongly affecting apex predators across the tropics [e.g. 76]. In other Neotropical biomes, such as Atlantic Forest and the Cerrado, roadkills are an important contributor to jaguar mortality, further removing individuals from already depleted populations [22].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although tigers are habitat generalists, most populations avoiding heavily disturbed areas and currently only survive in forest ecosystems, and core breeding populations are restricted to protected areas across much of their original range [77]. Accordingly, like in other wide-ranging large carnivores, a comprehensive network of effective protected areas throughout the Amazon is critical for the persistent of jaguar populations [e.g., 6, 76].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This work could yield project-specific action plans that would factor in costs of environmental, social, and climate impacts over the lifetime of proposed developments. Countries for potential focus include Democratic Republic of Congo, New Guinea, Indonesia, Ecuador, Malaysia, Mexico, Peru (Laurance et al 2014 , Johnson et al 2020 ), and multiple nations engaged with China's Belt and Road Initiative (Hughes 2019 , Carter et al 2020 ). Then the secretariat could sponsor pilot projects with those countries that are ready to mitigate (or reduce) infrastructure projects, linking this work to countries’ extant NBSAPs.…”
Section: Step 4: Prioritize Biodiversity Mainstreamingmentioning
confidence: 99%