Selecting biodiversity management
areas
Frank W. Davis, David M. Stoms, Richard L. Church, B. J. Okin, and
K. Norman Johnson
Full
Chapter
Here we present and evaluate a conservation strategy
whose objective is to represent all native plant communities in areas
where the primary management goal is to sustain native biodiversity.
We refer to these areas as Biodiversity Management Areas (BMAs), which
we define as specially designated public or private lands with an
active ecosystem management plan in operation whose purpose is to
contribute to regional maintenance of native genetic, species and
community levels of biodiversity, and the processes that maintain
that biodiversity. Our purpose in this chapter is to explore opportunities
for siting BMAs in the Sierra Nevada region. The strategic goal is
to design a BMA system that represents all major Sierran plant community
types, which we use as a coarse surrogate for ecosystems and their
component species. We consider a community type to be represented
if some pre-defined fraction of its mapped distribution occurs in
one or more BMAs. We use a multi-objective computer model to allocate
a minimum of new land to BMA status subject to the constraints that
all community types must be represented, and that the new BMA areas
should be located in areas of highest suitability for BMA status.
Our purpose in this exercise is not to identify the optimal sites
for a Sierran BMA system; instead it is to measure some of the likely
dimensions of plausible, alternative BMA systems for the Sierra Nevada
and to develop a rationale that would guide others in formulating
such a system. Thus we examine a wide range of possible BMA systems
based on different assumptions, constraints, target levels for representation,
and priorities.
If one ignores current land ownership and management
designations and sets out to represent plant communities in a BMA
system based on Calwater planning watersheds (which average roughly
10,000 acres in size), an efficient BMA system requires land in direct
proportion to the target level, at least over the range of target
levels examined in this study. In other words, it takes roughly 10%
of the region to meet a 10% goal, and 25% of the region to meet a
25% goal. The pattern of selected watersheds is very different from
the current distribution of parks and wilderness areas, which are
concentrated at middle and high elevations in the central and southern
portion of the range.
Public lands alone are insufficient to create a BMA
system that adequately represents all plant community types of the
Sierra Nevada. Many of the foothill community types occur almost exclusively
on private lands. Terrestrial vertebrates are reasonably well represented
in a BMA system selected for plant communities. A BMA system selected
for vertebrates alone, however, has little overlap with the one for
plant communities.
Areas selected by the BMAS model show only a modest
amount of overlap with areas selected by other SNEP working groups
as focal areas for conserving aquatic biodiversity or late successional/old
growth forests. However, the BMAS model can be formulated to favor
these areas with little loss of efficiency, especially in the northern
Sierra.