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of conservation strictly in terms of location, and the naming of single species as important to the environment rather than the interconnectivity between species and doesn't prioritize areas that are dense in biological diversity. Some argue, however, that KBAs are meant to be a "KBAs are a focused response to a central problem in conservation" rather than a catch-all solution to conservation. Criteria may also be too broad, as one analysis found that between 26 and 68% of all terrestrial land on Earth could be classified as a KBA.
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Some criticism involves the scale of KBAs, such as the use of global data to set parameters for single regions or ecosystems, and the lack of involvement of local governments and other authorities, especially in developing countries, in their implementation . Other issues raised include the defining
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Andrew T. Knight, Robert J. Smith, Richard M. Cowling, Philip G. Desmet, Daniel P. Faith, Simon
Ferrier, Caroline M. Gelderblom, Hedley Grantham, Amanda T. Lombard, Kristal Maze, Jeanne L. Nel, Jeffrey D. Parrish, Genevieve Q. K. Pence, Hugh P. Possingham, Belinda Reyers, Mathieu Rouget, Dirk Roux,
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as part of a collaboration between scientists, conservation groups, and government bodies across the world. The purpose of Key
Biodiversity Areas is to identify regions that are in need of protection by governments or other agencies. KBAs extend the
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systems. The determination of KBAs often brings sites onto the conservation agenda that hadn't previously been identified as needing protection due to the nature of the two non-exclusive criteria used to determine them;
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Remember to save your work regularly using the "Publish page" button. (It just means 'save'; it will still be in the sandbox.) You can add bold formatting to your additions to differentiate them from existing content.
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Holds congregations of species at important life stages, such as "breeding, feeding or during migration" or the spawning of offspring; is a "refuge" where species retreat from temporary negative environmental
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Maxwell, Jessica; Allen, Simon; Brooks, Thomas; Cuttelod, Annabelle; Dudley, Nigel; Fisher, Janet; Langhammer, Penny; Patenaude, Genevieve; Woodley, Stephen (2018-11-01).
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Simkins, Ashley T.; Beresford, Alison E.; Buchanan, Graeme M.; Crowe, Olivia; Elliott, Wendy; Izquierdo, Pablo; Patterson, David J.; Butchart, Stuart H. M. (2023-05-01).
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The KBA standard has been applied around the globe to over 16,000 areas with a total 21,000,000 km , which can be viewed in map form . It is used by scientists to assess
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Crowe, Olivia; Beresford, Alison E.; Buchanan, Graeme M.; Grantham, Hedley S.; Simkins, Ashley T.; Watson, James E. M.; Butchart, Stuart H. M. (2023-10-01).
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Has a high level of irreplaceability, "a concept used to describe how close a site is to being essential for achieving conservation targets"
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113:(IPAs), Ecologically and Biologically Significant Areas (EBSAs) in the High Seas, Alliance for Zero Extinction (AZE) sites, Prime
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Leon Bennun, Mohamed Bakarr, Güven Eken, Gustavo A. B. Da
Fonseca, Clarifying the Key Biodiversity Areas Approach,
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species relative to the global population; contains ecosystems that are threatened on a global scale.
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Yang, Runjia; Dong, Xinyu; Xu, Suchen; Wang, Kechao; Li, Xiaoya; Xiao, Wu; Ye, Yanmei (2024-02-01).
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A map showing the proportion of terrestrial Key
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A map showing the proportion of freshwater Key
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This is the sandbox page where you will draft your initial
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A global standard for the identification of Key
Biodiversity Areas : version 1.0
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conservation, using globally standardized criteria published by the
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Farooq, Harith; Antonelli, Alexandre; Faurby, Søren (2023-01-01).
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groups, or ecosystems that are confined to small geographic zones.
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Kullberg, Peter; Di Minin, Enrico; Moilanen, Atte (2019-10-01).
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Biodiversity, with prototype criteria developed for freshwater
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use an edit summary linking to the article you copied from
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