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A review and a framework for the integration of biodiversity monitoring at the habitat level
Authors:Szabolcs Lengyel  Andrej Kobler  Lado Kutnar  Erik Framstad  Pierre-Yves Henry  Valerija Babij  Bernd Gruber  Dirk Schmeller  Klaus Henle
Institution:1.Department of Ecology,University of Debrecen,Debrecen,Hungary;2.Department of Zoology,North Carolina State University,Raleigh,USA;3.Department of Forest Ecology,Slovenian Forestry Institute,Ljubljana,Slovenia;4.Norwegian Institute for Nature Research,Oslo,Norway;5.UMR 5173 & UMR 7179, Département écologie et Gestion de la Biodiversité,Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle,Paris,France;6.Jovan Had?i Institute of Biology,Scientific Research Centre of Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts,Ljubljana,Slovenia;7.Department of Conservation Biology,UFZ – Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research,Leipzig,Germany;8.Station d’écologie Experimentale du CNRS à Moulis,Saint Girons,France
Abstract:The monitoring of biodiversity at the level of habitats is becoming widespread in Europe and elsewhere as countries establish national habitat monitoring systems and various organisations initiate regional and local schemes. Parallel to this growth, it is increasingly important to address biodiversity changes on large spatial (e.g. continental) and temporal (e.g. decade-long) scales, which requires the integration of currently ongoing monitoring efforts. Here we review habitat monitoring and develop a framework for integrating data or activities across habitat monitoring schemes. We first identify three basic properties of monitoring activities: spatial aspect (explicitly spatial vs. non-spatial), documentation of spatial variation (field mapping vs. remote sensing) and coverage of habitats (all habitats or specific habitats in an area), and six classes of monitoring schemes based on these properties. Then we explore tasks essential for integrating schemes both within and across the major classes. Finally, we evaluate the need and potential for integration of currently existing schemes by drawing on data collected on European habitat monitoring in the EuMon project. Our results suggest a dire need for integration if we are to measure biodiversity changes across large spatial and temporal scales regarding the 2010 target and beyond. We also make recommendations for an integrated pan-European habitat monitoring scheme. Such a scheme should be based on remote sensing to record changes in land cover and habitat types over large scales, with complementary field mapping using unified methodology to provide ground truthing and to monitor small-scale changes, at least in habitat types of conservation importance.
Keywords:Biodiversity indicators  Biodiversity research strategy  Ecosystem monitoring  Habitats Directive  Nature conservation
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