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Towards a theoretical basis for ecosystem conservation
Authors:Ian Douglas Rozdilsky  Jerome Chave  Simon Asagr Levin  David Tilman
Institution:(1) Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, 08540, United States of America;(2) Laboratoire drsquoEcologie Terrestre, CNRS 5552, 13 avenue Colonel Roche, 31029 Toulouse, France;(3) Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, 55455, United States of America
Abstract:Humans have altered the environment so severely that extinction events are now occurring at rates unprecedented in modern history. In order to slow this trend, conservation actions must be taken to protect biodiversity, beyond just saving flagship species. Some governmental and conservation organizations have responded by committing to ecosystem conservation but, as yet, there is no coherent strategy for how this can be carried out. This report introduces many of the theoretical aspects that will need to be considered for the development of a coherent ecosystem conservation policy. The approach includes analyzing a hierarchy of interaction-based local coexistence mechanisms within a regional and historical context. This approach points toward the need for prioritizing sensitive habitats using local interaction models; considering the effects of historical exploitation mechanisms, which are now often missing; and evaluating regional diversity influences further to identify circumstances where system-wide habitat improvements deserve more emphasis.
Keywords:coexistence  ecosystem conservation  hierarchy  models
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