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Landscape-level naturalness of conservation easements in a mixed-use matrix
Authors:Fouch  Nakisha  Baldwin  Robert F.  Gerard  Patrick  Dyckman  Caitlin  Theobald  David M.
Affiliation:1.Department of Forestry and Environmental Conservation, Clemson University, 118A Lehotsky Hall, Clemson, SC, 29634, USA
;2.Department of Forestry and Environmental Conservation, Clemson University, 261 Lehotsky Hall, Clemson, SC, 29634, USA
;3.Department of Mathematical Sciences, Clemson University, O-114 Martin Hall, Clemson, SC, 29634, USA
;4.Department of City Planning and Real Estate Development, Clemson University, 2-319 Lee Hall, Clemson, SC, 29634, USA
;5.Conservation Science Partners, 5 Old Town Square Suite 205, Fort Collins, CO, 80524, USA
;
Abstract:Context

With underrepresentation of habitats in publicly protected areas, attention has focused on the function of alternative land conservation mechanisms. Private conservation easements (CEs) have proliferated in the United States, yet assessing landscape-level function is confounded by varying extent, resolution, and temporal scale.

Objectives

We developed and tested an assessment tool to evaluate interacting spatial, social, and environmental attributes of easements relative to the degree of human modification (HM). We hypothesized that on both private and public conservation properties HM would be lower than on non-conserved parcels, and that for fine-scale features (most CEs), the level of HM would be driven by the variables used to create the coarser scale HM measure.

Methods

Variation in HM between private, public, and non-conserved was tested via pairwise parcel sampling. Composition was evaluated using multiple geographic bounds and edge characteristics. We assessed both environmental and social predictors using multinomial logistic regression.

Results

Privately conserved lands did not differ significantly from non-conserved lands. Publicly conserved lands had lower HM than both privately conserved and non-conserved lands. Edge contrast was similar between private and matched non-conserved patches. The level of HM was not driven by distance to roads, or by elevation in this mixed-use setting.

Conclusions

Variation in tests for differences, land characteristics, and HM variables confirmed the significantly lower HM of publicly protected lands, and opens the question as to naturalness of easements in some contexts. CEs in this location may be representative of the mixed rural-forested landscape instead of more natural land cover.

Keywords:
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