An innovative tool to help conservation groups and organisations plan and prioritise conservation actions.

Boffa Miskell has developed ecological connectivity strategies (ECS) for two local boards in the Auckland region. Improving ecological connectivity increases ecosystem function and resilience. It helps protect biodiversity and mitigates impacts from climate change and other pressures on our ecosystems. Broadly similar, both strategies were designed, developed, and published as StoryMaps (web-based maps that draw on geography to tell a story).

View the StoryMaps
Upper Harbour Ecological Connectivity Strategy

Rodney East Ecological Connectivity Roadmap

Location

Auckland

Project date

2021

Awards

Award for Technical Documentation | RMLA Awards

The ecological connectivity strategies help better coordinate and support limited resources. The four key objectives are:

  • Map and describe areas of high ecological value.
  • Determine ecological connectivity for selected species.
  • Identify opportunities to protect, enhance, connect, and extend existing habitat patches and connections.
  • Prioritise areas for management, with potential management techniques.
  • Enable mana whenua, communities, councils, and other conservation agencies to work together.

To inform each ECS, connectivity analyses were undertaken for a range of ‘umbrella’ species including:

  • kererū (New Zealand pigeon)
  • matuku (Australasian bitter)
  • piwakawaka (New Zealand fantail)
  • mohu pererū (banded rail).

The umbrella species concept is based on the premise that conservation actions undertaken for the selected species will have substantial benefits for the wider ecosystem and other native species in those habitats. The Strategies employed several cutting-edge methods to increase their effectiveness. Linkage Mapper software (an ArcGIS toolbox for generating wildlife corridors) was used for modelling the connectivity of the selected species between the core habitats, providing insight into the dispersal patterns of the species.

Each strategy was presented as an ArcGIS StoryMap (alongside a traditional written report) to facilitate widespread engagement in conservation activities and allow users to explore connectivity and potential conservation actions in their own area of interest.

These strategies can be used by community conservation groups to strategically plan and/or expand their conservation activities by identifying priority areas and specific actions within those priority areas. They can help groups to gain the support of additional volunteers and communicate the importance of particular conservation activities.

The maps can also be used to support and inform funding applications, by demonstrating the impact of the proposed conservation work and its bigger-picture biodiversity benefits, with objectives that incorporate a landscape-scale approach.

This is the first time a project like this has been undertaken in New Zealand: spatially mapping the connectivity patterns of selected species visually; identifying the core habitats and linkages between the habitats; and determining the corridors of high and low connectivity.

Importantly, the interactive StoryMap platform helps to engage a wider audience that may not necessarily interact with conservation strategies normally, and thus increases the environmental literacy of the wider community.