| Important Plant Areas: a climate change imperative
Plantlife
The success of mankind’s ability to meet the challenges of climate
change will depend on how well it conserves the world’s plants.
Governments must act now, if plants are to continue to provide the
resources and ecosystem services upon which all other species depend.
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Juniper heath in Snowdonia, Wales: conservation of this IPA is being undertaken in partnership with the landowner and the national park authority. This IPA also lies at a pivotal point in the Countryside Council for Wales' vision for national “Ecological Connectivity,” where fragmented habitats and landscapes are restored and reconnected to enable species to survive the effects of climate change. Photo: Dr Trevor Dines, Plantlife |
The Climate Change challenge for plants:
Wild plant conservation has three mutually dependent aims:
- Maintaining plant species and their genetic diversity.
- Achieving sustainable use of wild plant resources.
- Securing plants and natural vegetation as providers of ecosystem
services.
These aims are most likely to be achieved where efforts are focused
on maintaining plants within robust ecosystems. However, the ability
of national governments to achieve these aims is under increasing
pressure because of climate change; the impact of which is seen at all
levels of species’ survival, including:
- A continuing shift in the potential ranges of many plant species,
causing them to become extinct in their existing locations. Many will
find it difficult to ‘follow the climate’, lacking adequate means of
dispersal and finding their paths impeded by human destruction of
wild habitats.
- Increasing scarcity of food, fuel, forage, medicines and the many
other resources derived from wild plants. This will be a serious
problem for the billions of people, especially in developing countries,
who rely on such resources for their subsistence and livelihoods.
- The necessity to maintain water supplies, flood control and soil
stability, all of which rely on natural vegetation in both river
catchments and coastal margins. Water supplies, already under stress
globally, will come under even greater pressure, further exacerbating
potential resource conflicts.
Plantlife International
Plantlife International is one of the very few nongovernmental
organisations (NGOs) dedicated solely to the conservation of wild
plants. Based in the UK, it works at local, national and regional levels
across the world.
Meeting the challenge – Important Plant Areas
Wild plants play a fundamental role in enabling national governments
to sustain delivery of social and economic development and climate
change magnifies the significance of this role. The critical factor in
securing sustainable management of national plant resources is how
governments involve the people and groups for whom the resources
have most value.
Plantlife has pioneered the development of Important Plant Areas
(IPA), a unique approach to plant conservation that engages these
stakeholders at every level. These Areas are already recognised as
contributing to Target 5 of the Global Strategy for Plant
Conservation, part of the Convention on Biological Diversity. The IPA
approach identifies a network of the most valuable sites for plant
diversity as a basis for prioritising conservation action at both site
and wider landscape levels.
The IPA approach in action:
At a landscape level, over 800 IPAs have been identified in 12
countries in Central and Eastern Europe. Data provided by national
partners is being used to inform the European High Nature Value
Programme for Agriculture and Forestry. In the UK, Plantlife is
working with a range of stakeholders, including landowners and
national governmental bodies, to ensure IPAs are incorporated within
spatial mapping of ecological networks as a basis for developing
ecosystem level adaptive management strategies to counter the
impacts of climate change.
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Some of the more than 500 medicinal plants on sale in the market in Dali, in the Himalayan region of China. Many species are becoming increasingly rare due to unmanaged collection. IPA projects in the region encourage sustainable collection to secure conservation of plant resources in the wild and the livelihoods of local collectors.
Photo: Dr Alan Hamilton, Plantlife |
At site level, Plantlife is successfully trialling the IPA approach in
several community-based projects aimed at the conservation of
medicinal plants in the Himalaya and East Africa. Medicinal plants
represent the biggest use of wild plant diversity globally (one in five
of all plant species). Herbal medicine is the predominant form of
medicine available to people in developing countries; the collection of
these plants for sale is also a major source of income in the
Himalaya. At this level prioritisation of sites for conservation is based
in particular on the perspectives of landowners and communities
who depend on the plants for their livelihoods.
Plantlife also maintains a web-based, publicly accessible database that
provides decision-makers and land managers at all levels with critical
information on IPAs and the key threats to their conservation
(www.plantlifeipa.org/reports.asp). As this is updated, it will also play
an increasingly valuable role in monitoring ecosystem changes.
Important Plant Areas are a proven and practical approach for any
government seeking to conserve vital national plant resources on a
sustainable basis and take action on climate change.
W: www.plantlife.org.uk
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