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Giant panda are the icon of conservation and all of us grew up with pictures of bamboo-eating panda. In a new study published in Conservation Science and Practice, an international team of researchers challenges this “panda as a bamboo specialist” paradigm. They hypothesize that the introduction of panda to more diverse habitats and foods may promote the conservation of the species.
The tendency to place protected areas in habitats that are less attractive to humans because they are not very productive may be the reason why many species remain threatened and continue to decline. The authors dub this phenomenon the "Protected Area Paradox." They contend that despite the growth in both marine and land-based protected areas globally, the attempt to conserve species in suboptimal habitats is yielding poor outcomes.
"Species that live in these types of habitats are known as refugee species and, in general, they suffer lower densities and fitness," said Graham Kerley, lead author of the study, Professor at Nelson Mandela University in South Africa and a visiting professor at the Department of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies, SLU Umeå. "This is because the species ends up living, not in the habitat most favourable to it, but in the habitat least favourable to the threats that caused its decline".
To back this hypothesis, Kerley and his colleagues use the example of the giant panda, a species that is still highly vulnerable, with a global population of fewer than 2,000 individuals.
"It has been demonstrated that giant pandas have moved to high altitude bamboo forests and changed their diet recently, that is, in the past 3,500 years, which is pretty recent when we are talking about a species like this one. Previously, they had a broader range of habitats, including warmer/moist subtropical habitats," Kerley said. "We hypothesize that the shifts reflect a retreat to ecologically suboptimal refuges in the face of habitat loss and other human threats."
Since these changes in species' diets and habitats can happen over the course of decades, centuries or millennia, many conservationists believe that this is how things have always been. Thus, they focus their work on keeping threatened or vulnerable animals and plants in the suboptimal habitats where they are currently found or they create reserves with similar conditions. The researchers believe that it is crucial to overcome these shifted baselines of conservation managers and scientists so that it is possible to identify who else is a victim of refugee species status.
"One of the first examples of a refugee species was the European bison," said Joris Cromsigt, co-author of the study and leader of the Megafauna and Sustainability research unit at SLU. "For long, European bison was seen as the king of the forest but more and more studies highlight that bison are predominately grazing and prefer landscapes with significant grass cover."
We predict that many of the species in protected areas are refugee species," Kerley said. "Thus, we need urgent action to allow improved conservation management."
Joris Cromsigt, Senior Lecturer
Department of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Umeå
https://www.slu.se/en/ew-cv/joris-cromsigt/
Joris Cromsigt. Photo: Susanna Bergström
The study "The Protected Area Paradox and refugee species: the giant panda and baselines shifted towards conserving species in marginal habitats" was published today in Conservation Science and Practice. Co-authors include Susanne Shultz from Manchester University in the United Kingdom; Mariska te Beest from Utrecht University in The Netherlands; and Daniel Pauly from the University of British Columbia in Canada.
https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.203
Page editor: David.Stephansson@slu.se