Major threats and challenges to biodiversity conservation
Three major threats are posed to biodiversity:
Habitat alteration, usually from higher-diverse natural ecosystems to less diverse (monoculture in the extreme case).
This is perhaps the most important
threat to biodiversity and, by extension, system productivity. Two important cases
in Kenya concern conversion of forests to cultivation (prevalent in all major forests); and conversion of rangeland to cropland which is often later abandoned. Over-harvesting, that is, an extraction rate that is higher than the regeneration rate, leading to eventual exhaustion of the resource. Again, over-harvesting of trees and grasses are particularly relevant issues in Kenya. Climatic change, often related to changing regional-level vegetation patterns, and involving features such as carbon dioxide build-up (global warming) and the El Nino and La Nina phenomena (climate regime reversal). The importance of natural resource conservation cannot be denied, given that ecosystem processes and services provide the foundation for our current existence, and that future consumption depends, to a great extent, on stock of natural capital.
Seen in this light,
conservation is a precondition for sustainable development.
A number of broad challenges exist, however:
Challenge 1: The fundamental problem is that more people earn greater immediate benefits from exploiting biological resources than they do from conserving them. Challenge 2: Areas of the world with the greatest levels of biodiversity are often those with fewest economic means to implement conservation. greatest challenges is to reconcile this situation.
One of the
Challenge 3: Whilst over-harvesting and/or depletion of a renewable resource may
be a conscious choice, perhaps the greatest need is for resource harvesting to be conducted under efficient management, rather than mismanagement, in order that society can realise the greatest possible gains.