Climate actions
If a reserve is created to protect a specific habitat and that habitat moves in response to changing conditions, it may be necessary to extend the protected area boundaries in one direction and to degazette areas that no longer contain the target habitat (for example, to move a coastal protected area inshore as sea level rises or to move a mountain protected area further uphill). Communities living in the path of a moving protected area will likely resist such a move unless they are compensated and given new land (possibly in the degazetted area). Ecologists are also considering options for allowing the temporary set-aside of land areas for a period of a few years or decades to allow natural migration to a more suitable habitat. Practical challenges are daunting in most places.
Moving protected areas
Objective
Maintain the ecological functions of a protected area.
Description
Expected results
Ecosystem preserved in the protected area.
Result indicators
Number of species kept protected
Area of new land protected [m²]
Involved actors
Governments, ecologists.
Expected timeline for action
Best practices
Criticalities
Scope of the action
Type of proposed actions
Sector of action
Climate impacts
Implementation scale