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Omnidiversity Consolidation of Conservation Assessment: A Case Study of Tasmanian Coastal Geoconservation Sites | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Geoconservation Research | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
دوره 5، شماره 1 - شماره پیاپی 7، شهریور 2022، صفحه 108-134 اصل مقاله (2.22 M) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
نوع مقاله: Original Article | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
شناسه دیجیتال (DOI): 10.30486/gcr.2022.1947195.1099 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
نویسندگان | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jake RA Crisp* 1؛ Joanna C Ellison1؛ Andrew Fischer2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1Discipline of Geography and Spatial Science, School of Technology, Environments and Design, University of Tasmania, Launceston, Newnham Drive, Tasmania, 7250, Australia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2IMAS Ecology and Biodiversity Centre, College of Science and Engineering, University of Tasmania, IMAS Launceston, Newnham Drive, Tasmania, 7250, Launceston, Tasmania | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
چکیده | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The exclusivity of biodiversity and geodiversity assessment hinders conservation outcomes, evidenced by the prioritization of biodiversity in conservation literature, and lagging developmental state in geodiversity assessment approaches, geoconservation strategies and outcomes. This study develops a consolidated approach, “omnidiversity”, amalgamating geodiversity and biodiversity assessment with geoconservation strategies and complementary ecological conservation criteria using ArcGIS mobile applications. ArcGIS Survey123 was adapted to assess geodiversity, biodiversity, geoconservation criteria and values. ArcGIS FieldMaps facilitated capturing the spatial location of biodiversity and geodiversity features. Three coastal geoconservation sites – Don Heads, Penguin Megabreccia, and Mersey Bluff – on the north-west coast of Tasmania were used as case studies. Results showed highest geodiversity (43.7), species richness (141) and visible interactions between geodiversity and biodiversity (120) at Don Heads geoconservation site, followed by geodiversity (40.5), species richness (107) and interactions (76) at Penguin Megabreccia site, and lowest geodiversity (7.3), species richness (89) and interactions (28) at the Mersey Bluff site. Omnidiversity showed biodiversity at Don Heads as most sensitive to geodiversity degradation attributed to extensive visible interactions, high conservation value, and the presence of sensitive species like the Little Penguin; followed by Penguin Megabreccia and Mersey Bluff coastal geoconservation sites. Omnidiversity allowed time-effective and cost-effective methods to simultaneously assess geodiversity and biodiversity, determine the harboring capacity of geodiversity for biodiversity, and facilitate conservation through unification of disparate steps into one streamlined approach. Using traditional geoconservation strategies, biodiversity values are excluded, and geodiversity elements are conserved only for their geoheritage importance. Omnidiversity enabled effective assessment of vulnerable environments and has potential to benefit other holistic approaches such as the conserving nature’s stage approach and ecosystem-based management. Subsequent research could augment omnidiversity with other traditional biodiversity assessment approaches and conservation strategies, further trial in other ecosystems, and develop an optimized third-party digital application to provide greater availability for use. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
کلیدواژهها | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Geodiversity assessment؛ Biodiversity assessment؛ ArcGIS؛ Natural values؛ Coastal vegetation؛ Invertebrates | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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اصل مقاله | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Introduction
Geodiversity
Biodiversity
Geoconservation Geoconservation is an action conserving geodiversity for its intrinsic, ecological and geoheritage assessment value (Sharples 2002; Prosser 2013). Geoheritage is the importance or quality (Diaz-Martinez 2011; Pellitero et al. 2015) of a geoconservation site, and geoheritage assessment is an approach to determine whether geodiversity exhibits scientific, educational, cultural or aesthetic value. A geoconservation site is an area deemed significant based on geoheritage and geoconservation value (Seijmonsbergen et al. 2009). The geoconservation strategy comprises several successive steps to identify, manage and list geoconservation sites: inventorying, assessment using a range of methodological approaches such as geoheritage assessment ranking techniques, conservation, interpretation, and promotion (Brilha 2005; Brilha 2016).
Geoconservation is still in its infancy (Brocx and Semeniuk 2007; Crofts 2019), hindered by subjectivities in geoheritage assessment criteria (White and Wakelin-King 2014), conceptual weaknesses in geodiversity (Serrano and Ruiz-Flano 2007; Soms 2017; Crisp et al. 2020), and the separation of the geoconservation strategy from geodiversity assessment (Brilha 2016). Geoconservation is further limited by the separation of the concepts of geodiversity and biodiversity (Crisp et al. 2022). Novel and robust approaches could facilitate the mainstreaming of geoconservation within nature conservation strategies and conservation literature (Gordon et al. 2017), while biodiversity needs standardized (Klingbeil and Willig 2015) and improved methods to expedite the inventorying and descriptions of species (Grosjean et al. 2015). Biodiversity is widely disseminated in conservation literature (Pereira et al. 2013), while geoconservation is still lagging and underrepresented (Brocx and Semeniuk 2007; Crisp et al. 2020). Review shows that a consolidated approach bridging these noted concepts and methods with geoconservation strategies could complement nature conservation outcomes (Gordon et al. 2017; Crisp et al. 2022).
Combined Geodiversity and Biodiversity Assessment and Consolidated Conservation Outcomes Research combining geodiversity and biodiversity assessment offers strong practical applications in conservation biology (Toivanen et al. 2019), and by extension in geoconservation outcomes (Crisp et al. 2022). Yet, many scholars still treat each as separate entities in conservation literature (Matthews 2014). The relationship between geodiversity and biodiversity, using remote sensing (Read et al. 2019; Zarnetske et al. 2019; Record et al. 2020) and statistical modeling (Parks and Mulligan 2010; Tukiainen et al. 2017; Read et al. 2019; Zarnetske et al. 2019; Ren et al. 2021) can link geodiversity and biodiversity. For example, Read et al. (2019) used multivariate linear mixed models with spatial random effects to determine which geodiversity predictors account for variation in bird and tree diversity across the USA, and found that elevation variability was the greatest predictor of biodiversity with a consistently positive relationship. However, despite recent contributions, exploring the relationship between geodiversity and biodiversity (Parks and Mulligan 2010; Bétard 2013; Seijmonsbergen et al. 2015; Najwer et al. 2016; Tukiainen et al. 2017; Toivanen et al. 2019; Zarnetske et al. 2019; Read et al. 2020; Record et al. 2020; Kienle et al. 2021; Ren et al. 2021), less work has been done on combining assessment approaches (Crisp et al. 2020; Crisp et al. 2022). In the geodiversity assessment literature, only 12% of studies considered biodiversity in their methodological intentions, and none were linked to geoconservation strategies (Crisp et al. 2020). Geodiversity assessment and geoconservation strategies are recognized as separate research endeavors (Brilha 2016). An approach combining geodiversity and biodiversity assessment could complement other holistic and widely disseminated endeavors (O’Hagan 2020) such as ecosystem-based management (EBM) (Delacámara et al. 2020). EBM is a management strategy encouraging multiple stakeholders to integrate all ecosystem components, including ecosystem services (ES) into conservation management and decision-making (Monaco et al. 2021). However, the component of geodiversity assessment is often overlooked in ecosystem-based literature (Gray et al. 2013; Fox et al. 2020), with biodiversity being favored (Pereira et al. 2013; Santos et al. 2017). Yet, ecosystems are not only defined by their biological components, but through the interaction of geodiversity and biodiversity (Antonelli et al. 2018). Geodiversity underpins biodiversity (Parks and Mulligan 2010) such as species richness (Hjort et al. 2012; Bailey et al. 2017), and biodiversity underpins ecosystem services and functioning (Edwards et al. 2014). Yet, much of the EBM literature still excludes geodiversity; hence, geodiversity and biodiversity should be treated as equals in holistic policies and ecosystem management endeavors (Gray 2018), with ES within EBM approaches benefiting from an enhanced understanding of the interactions between biotic and abiotic nature (Fox et al. 2020). It seems evident that combining geodiversity and biodiversity assessment could offer many consolidated benefits to EBM outcomes (Toivanen et al. 2019; Crisp et al. 2022).
Efforts to combine geodiversity and biodiversity assessment with conservation strategies such as geoconservation could further complement EBM approaches. Management and conservation processes can be hindered when singular variables or objectives are considered, and consolidated methods or EBM processes are needed to address such challenges (Tallis et al. 2010; O’Hagan 2020; Piet et al. 2020; Crisp et al. 2022). Given the many facets of EBM approaches such as ecological, biological, social and political elements (O’Higgins et al. 2020), standardized methodologies in EBM processes are now encouraged to unify and improve conservation outcomes (Piet et al. 2020). Coastal EBM can be difficult to implement and achieve given the numerous interrelated factors in these systems such as social, economic, and ecological elements; hence, EBM methods accounting for all entities there encouraged (Wongthong and Harvey 2014; Lee and Hsieh 2016; Tan et al. 2018). Further, time-constraints, cost, and complexity can hinder implementation of multiple facets in EBM approaches (Tallis et al. 2010). Therefore, combined geodiversity and biodiversity assessment could help conservationists better cover ecological and biological aspects in EBM processes, while consolidation with conservation strategies such as geoconservation could assist in accounting for other social, economic, and humanistic elements. A unified approach combining geodiversity and biodiversity assessment with conservation strategies could provide a time and cost-efficient approach (Crisp et al. 2022) to complement EBM processes in conservation endeavors. Objective This study tests an approach to combine geodiversity and biodiversity assessment with geoconservation strategies (hereafter, ‘consolidation approach’) at three Tasmanian coastal geoconservation sites. In this study we:
Materials and Methods Coastal environments – the unique and narrow interface between ocean and land (Ramesh et al. 2015) – are complex and mutable environments comprising numerous geological and geomorphological characteristics across diverse temporal and spatial scales (Carapuço et al. 2016). Coastal environments also support sensitive ecosystems and high biodiversity (Muller-Karger et al. 2018), and are home to many endangered species (Ramesh et al. 2015). Coastal environments also support extensive ecosystem services such as fisheries, agricultural lands, and coastal protection (Ramesh et al. 2015) and geosystem services such as habitat provision, cultural, geotourism, aesthetic, and educational values. Further, much of the world’s human population and tourism depends on coastal environments (Gray 2011); hence, they are arguably one of the most sensitive social-ecological systems on earth (Cummins et al. 2014). Therefore, a novel cost-effective and time-efficient consolidated approach was implemented at three Tasmanian coastal geoconservation sites. Tasmanian geoconservation sites have varied shapes and sizes of boundaries (Figs S1–S3), so a traditional transect and quadrat approach could lead to values being missed or unintentionally overlooked, hence, a randomized observation-based approach previously used in Crisp et al. (2022) was used to count species richness and geodiversity elements. To ensure that the entire area of a geoconservation boundary was sampled, in-field navigation was facilitated by the ArcGIS application, FieldMaps. This app displayed a real-time location in the field of the user relative to the geoconservation boundaries (Fig. 2E–F).
Three North-West Tasmanian Coastal Geoconservation Sites Table 1. Dominant geological type, age, geoheritage significance and relevant values from case study coastal geoconservation sites considered in this study.
Data Collection Ground-dwelling invertebrates were sampled by establishing ten dry pitfall traps at each of the three sites using the DPW (2013) standard operating procedure of trap size of 10 cm width and 15 cm depth with leaf litter placed at the base, with time being the only variation. This study left the traps for 24 hours to ensure expedition of biodiversity data collection, given that high time requirements currently hinder effective biodiversity monitoring and rapid species richness counts (Miller 2007). There remains no standardized approach in design and duration of pitfall traps, with valid reasons for allowing variations in methodologies (Brown and Matthews 2016). Invertebrate species were identified by morphological differences such as shape, size, symmetry, locomotion, segmentation, number of legs, antenna length, and color (Kotpal 2012).
Consolidation Approach Three steps contribute to the determination of an overall assessment outcome (Fig. 1): (1) assessment index, (2) assessment ranking tool, and (3) assessment outcome criteria. The first step required assessing species richness, geodiversity, and the sum of visible interactions between geodiversity and biodiversity (see Equation 1).
Step two required ranking five criteria (Table S5):
The third step required ranking 16 conservation criteria (Table S6) recommended by Asaad et al. (2017) to identify areas for biodiversity conservation. Many of the criteria such as species of conservation concern, history stage of biodiversity, and uniqueness and rarity of habitat were performed using an inventory of literature and knowledge of the site (Crisp et al. 2022). Other criteria such as degree to which species interact with geodiversity, vulnerability of species to geoconservation degradation, ecological integrity and others were based on subjectivity and judgement from the data acquired in-field. The criteria used in the third step were influenced by the first two stages. For example, sites exhibiting high overall assessment outcomes were assessed with all criteria (Table S6), criteria C10 to C16 were used for sites with moderate assessment outcomes, and the third step was omitted from sites exhibiting no overall assessment outcome.
Figure 1. Consolidation approach encompassing the three steps used to determine an overall assessment outcome at each of the geoconservation sites.
ArcGIS Digital Applications
Survey123 First Stage: Assessment Index and Ranking Tool
Survey123 Second Stage: Assessment Outcome Criteria Steps 1 to 4 in the second stage of the app (Fig. 3B) required completion of the Brilha (2016) geoconservation strategy. Further explanation of each geoconservation strategy step (Fig. 3B) for each of the coastal geoconservation sites is described in Crisp et al. (2022). In the inventory stage of the geoconservation strategy, the novel term omnidiversity site complements geosite and geodiversity site (Fig. 3A) described in Brilha (2016) and refers to instances where steps 1 to 2 (Figs. 1, 2A, D) rank from high to very high. Sites less than high were deemed geodiversity sites or geosites using the traditional Brilha (2016) approach. At omnidiversity sites, the app prompts the user to implement both the geoconservation strategy (Brilha 2016) and consolidation approach (Fig. 1). At geodiversity sites or geosites, the application only prompts the user to implement the traditional geoconservation strategy (Brilha 2016). The assessment index and assessment ranking tool from the first two steps (Fig. 3C) determines the assessment outcome criteria use in the application (Fig. 3D). For example, a moderate overall assessment outcome includes ranking of C10 to C16 (Tables 2, S6), while high overall assessment outcome included all sixteen criteria (Tables 2, S6). Assessment outcome criteria (Table S6) change as geoconservation sites not exhibiting high interaction value between geodiversity and biodiversity do not require additional measures to conserve biodiversity. Further, the geoconservation strategy also influences assessment outcome criteria (Figs. 1, 3D). For example, if scientific value is assessed as relevant at a site, C10: vulnerability of species if scientific values absent, will be included. When values are not relevant, corresponding criteria are excluded. The application subsequently calculates the overall assessment outcome based on Equation 2. Figure 3. The user interface of the omnidiversity approach adapted in Survey 123. A) Step one of the geoconservation strategy prompting population of site type. B) The five separate steps to implement each stage of the geoconservation strategy and consolidation assessment criteria. C) Interface for assessment index, assessment ranking tool, and overall assessment outcome. D) Interface for assessment outcome criteria to determine final value for overall assessment outcome at the site.
Results Site Reconnaissance Figure 4. Imagery captured from each of the three coastal geoconservation sites during a site survey. A) Northwest facing view of Don Heads Basalt Landform geoconservation site (444000E, 5443389N). B) West-facing view of Penguin Megabreccia geoconservation site (423192E, 5447997N). C) East facing view of Mersey Bluff Pseudo-Petroglyphs geoconservation site (446044E, 5443419N).
Consolidation Approach Outcomes Site 1 (Fig. 4A) showed the highest geodiversity (43.7) and species richness (141) compared to other sites (Table 2). Site 1 also exhibited extensive interactions between geodiversity and biodiversity (120), and a high overall assessment outcome (Table 2). Conversely, Site 3 (Fig. 4C) showed the lowest geodiversity (7.3) and species richness (89) and exhibited few interactions (28); therefore, the site ranked with a low assessment outcome and was not deemed an omnidiversity site (Table 2). Site 2 (Fig. 4B) featured the second-most abundant species richness (107) and geodiversity (40.5), exhibiting fewer interactions (76) compared to Site 1, therefore, the site was deemed a moderate omnidiversity site (Table 2).
Table 2. The data acquired from the implementation of the consolidation approach at each of the geoconservation sites.
Acquisition of Biodiversity and Geodiversity Data using Digital Applications Biodiversity and geodiversity data collected using the mobile apps were viewed as a final map in ArcGIS Online (Fig. 5). The data uploaded to ArcGIS Online from Survey123 and FieldMaps also contains associated attribute information (Fig. 7). For example, the captured consolidation toolkit framework data points from Survey123 contain attribute information about assessment index, assessment ranking tool, conservation criteria and the geoconservation strategy (Figs. 5, 6). The data (Table 2) complements existing Tasmanian databases such as the Natural Values Atlas through the provision of attribute information about geoheritage value, geodiversity, biodiversity and now a consolidation approach, often lacking from many existing databases (Crisp et al. 2022). This captured geoheritage and attribute information can be spatially aligned at each geoconservation site (Figs. 5, 6), and subsequently merged with existing databases such as the Natural Values Atlas and The Land Information System Tasmania (Crisp et al. 2022).
Corresponding with high geodiversity (Table 2), Site 1 contains a range of geological features across ~2 km of coastline (Fig. S4). The site is predominantly made up of erosional and accumulation landforms, followed by geomorphological and generic geological structures (Fig. S4) (Table S7). The high species richness mostly includes coastal vegetation and invertebrate species (Table S7). Site 2 also contains a range of geological features over ~4 km of coastline (Fig. 4B), with erosional landforms and hydrological features (Fig. S5) (Table S7). The species richness at Site 2 comprises mostly of coastal vegetation and invertebrate point features (Table S7). Site 3 includes geomorphological, soil and stratigraphic features (Fig. 5) (Table S7) but contains few hydrological features (Fig. 5) (Table S7). The species richness at Site 3 includes coastal vegetation species, followed by an equal distribution of vertebrate and invertebrate species (Table S7). Figure 5. Example of all data captured from ArcGIS Survey123 and FieldMaps compiled into one map at Mersey Bluff Pseudo-Petroglyphs geoconservation site, uploaded to ArcGIS Online, with geodiversity, biodiversity and consolidation approach included (© ESRI background aerial imagery).
Spatially located biodiversity and geodiversity point features also stored relevant attribute information. In this case, a geodiversity point stored a photograph, description of the geological elements, and whether this feature exhibited any interaction with local biodiversity (Fig. 6). This attribute information, in conjunction with the spatially located point feature, would then upload to ArcGIS Online and could subsequently be merged with other relevant databases such as the Tasmanian Geoconservation Database (Crisp et al. 2022). The consolidation approach data points captured in-field using Survey123 (Fig. 5) also stored the survey results (Tables 2, S4, S5, S5) as attribute information.
Figure 6. Example of the associated attributes of each biodiversity or geodiversity points captured in-field displayed using ArcGIS Online. Discussion ArcGIS Digital Applications
Unification and Facilitation of Geoconservation Strategy
Consolidated Conservation Outcomes
The consolidated approach showed by contrast that Site 3 is not an omnidiversity site given the low interaction value between the moderate species richness and geodiversity (Table S5). Therefore, the geodiversity site was determined to be eligible for geoconservation value and protection based on cultural values (Fig. 4A; Table S4), with doleritic rock carvings linked to Tasmanian Aboriginal history and the presence of the oldest Aboriginal operated museum in Australia, Tiagarra (Crisp et al. 2022). The consolidated approach suggests that biodiversity at the site is less sensitive to geodiversity degradation (Tables 2, S5). Lower species richness and interaction value (Table 2) could be attributed to the proximity of degraded zones from anthropogenic influences, with roads, footpaths, carparks, and buildings situated close to surrounding biodiversity and geodiversity (Figs. 5, S2).
Improved Assessment and Management of Vulnerable Environments
Many interrelated factors in coastal zone management hinder its implementation given time-constraints, cost, and complexity of methods (Tallis et al. 2010). EBM has become the most dominant approach used in environmental management and conservation, yet the holistic and multi-faceted nature of EBM presents some challenges in its implementation (O’Higgins et al. 2020). The consolidation approach provides a viable contribution to complement EBM processes, with streamlined geodiversity and biodiversity assessment including interaction values (Figs. 2, 3; Table 2), and consolidated geoconservation and biological conservation outcomes (Fig. 3; Tables 2, S1, S6). Development of a tool combining geodiversity and biodiversity assessment in geoconservation strategies is needed (Brocx and Semeniuk 2007) to complement current holistic approaches in conservation such as EBM. Geodiversity is often excluded from EBM literature (Gray 2018), yet ecosystems are better defined in conservation literature through understanding of the interaction between geodiversity and biodiversity (Parks and Mulligan 2010). Geodiversity and biodiversity should be treated equally in EBM conservation processes (Gray,2018; Fox et al. 2020; Crisp et al. 2022), with their consolidation offering strong practical applications in conservation literature (Toivanen et al. 2019). Omnidiversity – a Novel Approach to Consolidated Conservation Outcomes Omnidiversity is a new term introduced to describe the novel consolidation approach developed and trialed in this study. Omnidiversity, is an approach to bridge the gap between geodiversity and biodiversity assessment, defined as “A consolidated approach to assess geodiversity and biodiversity, determine the harboring capacity or interaction value of geodiversity for biodiversity, and the assessment of relevant conservation criteria in vulnerable environments and ecosystems”. It complements other conservation endeavours such as EBM approaches (Tallis et al. 2010; Gordon and Barron 2012; Gray et al. 2013), natural diversity (Santos et al. 2017), ecological diversity (Comer et al. 2015) and conserving nature’s stage (CNS) (Hjort et al. 2015; Lawler et al. 2015). Natural diversity is a related term and describes the combination of biological and physical elements in nature (Santos 2017) and is synonymous with the term, ecological diversity (Comer et al. 2015). Unlike ‘geodiversity assessment’, ‘biodiversity assessment’ or ‘ecosystem assessment’, no publications have contributed to ‘natural diversity assessment’ (Crisp et al. 2020), despite natural diversity in conservation literature potentially providing better indications of conservation value (Santana, 2019). Further, ecosystem ‘assessments’ and EBM under-represent and undervalue the contribution of geodiversity (Gray et al. 2013). Omnidiversity provides the first concept and approach consolidating geodiversity and biodiversity assessment with conservation strategies such as geoconservation (Fig. 7). The CNS approach is a strategy protecting biodiversity by conserving and maintaining geodiversity (Beier et al. 2015), therefore, omnidiversity could provide CNS scholars with a new approach to complement the CNS strategy.
Figure 7. Interconnectedness and relationship of existing terms biodiversity, geodiversity, natural diversity, and conservation to the novel omnidiversity and omnidiversity assessment terms. Current Research, Limitations, and Future Directions in Omnidiversity Approach The consolidation approach supported in this study (Figs. 3, 4; Tables 2, S1, S5, S6) provides the novel approach of omnidiversity in the effective assessment and management of vulnerable environments. Subsequent research is required to further explore the applicability of omnidiversity in other conservation research endeavors such as CNS and EBM. This study was limited to coastal environments, and further study could consider other vulnerable environments such as karst systems (Dixon and Duhig 1996; Shi et al. 2019). Cliff environments provide biodiversity with protection from predators, and plant biodiversity a surface to attach at higher elevations, and cliffs often facilitate high densities for seabird congregations (Hjort et al. 2015; Larson et al. 2000). Talus scree provide habitat for small mammal, reptile, amphibian and other invertebrate species (Hjort et al. 2015; Ruužička et al. 2012), and considerable biodiversity inhabits the hydrological and nutrient regime that develops in rock pools (Hjort et al. 2015).
Subsequent research could assess interactions of the assessment index (Fig. 1) using statistical models and relationships with associated conservation values. Statistical models exploring the relationship between geodiversity and biodiversity assessment are limited by disparities in geodiversity and biodiversity index parameters (Seijmonsbergen et al. 2015). Consolidated geodiversity, species richness, and interaction value assessment parameters would benefit and improve statistical power in models exploring the relationship between geodiversity and biodiversity (Hjort et al. 2012; Bailey et al. 2017, 2018; Tukiainen et al. 2017), and subsequent research could explore potential benefits of omnidiversity to modelling in geodiversity and biodiversity assessment.
Species richness was determined using a count-method. Therefore, the current approach likely underestimated species presence at each site (Gibson 2011; Gotelli and Colwell 2011; Madalozzo et al. 2017), exacerbated by the absence of an account of seasonal or temporal fluctuations of biodiversity (Shimadzu et al. 2013), and the absence of traditional field-based approaches such as transects and quadrats (Geml et al. 2009; O’Hara et al. 2010; Gibson 2011; Malik et al. 2019). However, data acquired still supported the objective of the study to develop and trial a novel approach and more representative species counts would only further justify the findings, evidenced by the high geodiversity and biodiversity already acquired, extensive interactions between geodiversity and biodiversity, and conservation values found (Tables 2, S4). Mobile digital applications, given their support for enhanced recording and monitoring of the presence and location of species and associated attributes (Teacher et al. 2013; Chandler et al. 2017; Luna et al. 2018) facilitated the alternative count-method to other traditional biodiversity assessment approaches. For example, opportunistic sampling using digital tools is widely used by volunteers such as citizen scientists (Luna et al. 2018; Kelling et al. 2019; Callaghan et al. 2020; Henckel et al. 2020; Nowak et al. 2020) to monitor species, and recently geodiversity (Williams and McHenry 2021; Crisp et al. 2022); review shows omnidiversity, as it stands (Figs. 3, 4; Tables 2, S1, S5, S6), is a promising tool to consolidate and enhance current geodiversity inventorying and biodiversity monitoring approaches. Therefore, subsequent methodological developments may include implementation of jackknives or bootstrap estimators to account for species underestimation (Hellmann and Fowler 1999; Oertli et al. 2005), account for seasonal variation of species, inclusion of traditional field-based methods, and other conservation strategies.
ArcGIS Online is a subscription service requiring fees to activate all mobile GIS application features, and ArcGIS tools have not been developed to meet the specific needs of both the geoscientific and biological community (Crisp et al. 2022). Such software limitations of the omnidiversity approach could be resolved by developing a third-party digital application to better encapsulate software needs, universal availability and interaction with EBM and other conservation applications in biological and nature conservation. Conclusions This study introduced and trialed a novel omnidiversity approach at three Tasmanian coastal geoconservation sites using the ArcGIS mobile digital applications Survey123 and FieldMaps. Omnidiversity provided a time and cost-effective method to simultaneously assess geodiversity and biodiversity, determine the harboring capacity of geodiversity for biodiversity, and facilitated effective implementation of a geoconservation strategy through unification of disparate steps into one streamlined approach. Previously, the geodiversity at omnidiversity sites was conserved only for its geoheritage importance. With implementation of omnidiversity at omnidiversity sites, geoheritage importance, harboring capacity of geodiversity, and the vulnerability of biodiversity to changes in geodiversity were effectively identified using a unified approach. This study demonstrated that omnidiversity would facilitate effective assessment and management of other vulnerable environments, and review indicated potential to benefit other holistic approaches such as ecosystem-based management and conserving nature’s stage. With the intrinsic relationship between geodiversity and biodiversity, the exclusion of geodiversity from contemporary EBM processes, and the need for time and cost-efficient approaches, omnidiversity is demonstrated as a viable contribution to facilitate conservation outcomes. However, this novel concept needs further methodological development and augmentation with other conservation strategies such as biological and nature conservation. Subsequent research could also develop an optimized third-party digital application to provide greater versatility for integration with other holistic approaches such as ecosystem-based management, and subjectivities in conservation criteria could be alleviated using statistical validation and optimization techniques. Declaration of conflicting interests We the authors declare no conflict of interest for this research. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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