Biodiversity Funds and Conservation Needs in the EU Under Climate Change
Despite ambitious biodiversity policy goals, less than a fifth of the European
Union’s (EU) legally protected species and habitats show a favorable conservation
status. The recent EU biodiversity strategy recognizes that climate change
adds to the challenge of halting biodiversity loss, and that an optimal distribution
of financial resources is needed. Here, we analyze recent EU biodiversity
funding from a climate change perspective.We compare the allocation of funds
to the distribution of both current conservation priorities (within and beyond
Natura 2000) and future conservation needs at the level of NUTS-2 regions,
using modeled bird distributions as indicators of conservation value. We find
that funding is reasonably well aligned with current conservation efforts but
poorly fit with future needs under climate change, indicating obstacles for implementing
adaptation measures. We suggest revising EU biodiversity funding
instruments for the 2014–2020 budget period to better account for potential
climate change impacts on biodiversity.
LUNG Tobias;
MELLER Laura;
VAN TEEFFELEN Astrid;
THUILLER Wilfried;
CABEZA Mar;
2014-09-17
WILEY-BLACKWELL
JRC91564
1755-263X,
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/conl.12096/full,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC91564,
10.1111/conl.12096,
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