Identifying social–ecological gaps to promote biocrust conservation actions
2020
Abstract. Globally, most bare-looking areas in dryland regions are
covered by biocrusts which play a crucial role in modifying several soil
surface properties and driving key ecosystem processes. These keystone
communities face important threats (e.g. climate change) that place
their conservation at risk and in turn the sustainability of the ecosystems
they inhabit. Therefore, there is an urgent need to develop ecosystem
management strategies to ensure their protection. However, to provide a
solid path towards biocrust conservation, the
understanding by stakeholders and governance structures of the
ecological functions of these communities, their role as benefit providers,
and the pressures threatening their important effects are indispensable. Whereas the
ecological scope of biocrust has been widely studied in the last decades,
the social dimension of their role remained unexplored. By reviewing
literature in biocrusts from a social–ecological approach, here we
identified knowledge gaps and new research areas that need to be addressed
in order to produce scientific knowledge that better guides dryland
conservation policies and actions. This research
agenda is a prerequisite to advance biocrust conservation.
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