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Gaps and mismatches between global conservation priorities and spending Benjamin S. Halpern, University of California, Santa Barbara C R. Pyke H E. Fox J C. Haney M A. Schlaepfer P Zaradic
ABSTRACT: Several international conservation organizations have recently
produced global priority maps to guide conservation activities and spending in
their own and other conservation organizations. Surprisingly, it is not
possible to directly evaluate the relationship between priorities and spending
within a given organization because none of the organizations with global
priority models tracks how they spend their money relative to their priorities.
We were able, however, to evaluate the spending patterns of five other large
biodiversity conservation organizations without their own published global
priority models and investigate the potential influence of priority models on
this spending. On average, countries with priority areas received greater
conservation investment; global prioritization systems, however, explained
between only 2 and 32% of the US$1.5 billion spent in 2002, depending on
whether the United States was removed from analyses and whether conservation
spending was adjusted by the per capita gross domestic product within each
country. We also found little overlap in the spending patterns of the five
conservation organizations evaluated, suggesting that informal coordination or
segregation of effort may be occurring. Our results also highlight a number of
potential gaps and mismatches in how limited conservation funds are spent and
provide the first audit of global conservation spending patterns. More explicit
presentation of conservation priorities by organizations currently without
priority models and better tracking of spending by those with published
priorities are clearly needed to help make future conservation activities as
efficient as possible.
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