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Journal ArticleDOI

Flagship species, ecological complementarity and conserving the diversity of mammals and birds in sub‐Saharan Africa

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TLDR
In order to succeed in representing many mammals and birds in area selection, it is not sufficient for the groups used for selection to occur in many different eco-regions, they must also have low overlaps in distribution so as to provide high ecological complementarity.
Abstract
More biodiversity could be protected in situ if the few species that attract the most popular support (the ‘flagship’ species) had distributions that also covered the broader diversity of organisms. We studied how well different groups of mammals performed for representing the diversity of mammals and breeding birds among 1° areas of sub-Saharan Africa. We demonstrate that choosing areas of sub-Saharan Africa using either conservationists' six primary flagship mammals, or the six ‘Big Five’ mammals popular with wildlife tourists, is not significantly better for representing the diversity of mammals and birds than choosing areas at random. Furthermore, neither of these groups is significantly better for representing the diversity of mammals and birds than groups of the same number of species chosen at random. We show that in order to succeed in representing many mammals and birds in area selection, it is not sufficient for the groups used for selection to occur in many different eco-regions, they must also have low overlaps in distribution, so as to provide high ecological complementarity (a similar pattern of ecological complementarity must be shared by the larger group of species to be represented). Therefore there may be a need for an explicit policy to balance the requirements of flagship conservation and broader biodiversity conservation, which will have implications for the distribution of resources.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Conservation biogeography: assessment and prospect

TL;DR: The role played by biogeographical science in the emergence of conservation guidance is examined and the case for the recognition of Conservation Biogeography as a key subfield of conservation biology delimited as both a substantial body of theory and analysis is made.
Journal ArticleDOI

New developments in museum-based informatics and applications in biodiversity analysis

TL;DR: Information from natural history collections about the diversity, taxonomy and historical distributions of species worldwide is becoming increasingly available over the Internet, and its utility and limitations are critically reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Protected area needs in a changing climate

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors apply species distribution modeling and conservation planning tools in three regions (Mexico, the Cape Floristic Region of South Africa, and Western Europe) to examine the need for additional protected areas in light of anticipated species range shifts caused by climate change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mapping spatial pattern in biodiversity for regional conservation planning: Where to from here?

Simon Ferrier
- 01 Mar 2002 - 
TL;DR: Three strategies for making more effective use of available biological data and knowledge to alleviate regional conservation planning problems are proposed, more closely integrating biological and environmental data through predictive modeling, with increased emphasis on modeling collective properties of biodiversity rather than individual entities.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference

TL;DR: Wilson and Reeder's Mammal Species of the World as discussed by the authors is the classic reference book on the taxonomic classification and distribution of more than 5400 species of mammals that exist today.
Book

The Kingdon field guide to African mammals

TL;DR: Mammals primates bats insectivores elephant shrews hares rodents carnivores pangolins aardvark hyraxes elephant horses rhinos hippos pigs chevrotain deer giraffes bovines antelopes African environments conservation.
Journal ArticleDOI

What to protect?—Systematics and the agony of choice

TL;DR: It is concluded that two basic rounds of analysis are required: recognition of global priority areas by taxic diversity techniques; and, within any such area, analysis without taxic weighting to identify a network of reserves to contain all local taxa and ecosystems.
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