Reply to: Causal claims, causal assumptions and protected area impact

In the accompanying Comment, Geldmann et al.1 incorrectly claim that protected area (PA) efficacy cannot be established without biodiversity data that predates establishment of the PA. Spatial correlates of diversity are known as a result of centuries of ecological research; our analyses controlled...

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Main Authors: Jedediah F., Brodie, Mohd Azlan, Jayasilan, Cheng, Chen, Oliver R., Wearn, Mairin C. M., Deith, James G., C. Ball, Eleanor M., Slade, David F. R., P. Burslem, Shu, Woan Teoh, Peter J., Williams, Anh, Nguyen, Jonathan H., Moore, Scott J., Goetz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2025
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Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47677/2/CAUSAL.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47677/
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-08513-7
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08512-8
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spelling my.unimas.ir-476772025-03-03T00:06:28Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47677/ Reply to: Causal claims, causal assumptions and protected area impact Jedediah F., Brodie Mohd Azlan, Jayasilan Cheng, Chen Oliver R., Wearn Mairin C. M., Deith James G., C. Ball Eleanor M., Slade David F. R., P. Burslem Shu, Woan Teoh Peter J., Williams Anh, Nguyen Jonathan H., Moore Scott J., Goetz QL Zoology In the accompanying Comment, Geldmann et al.1 incorrectly claim that protected area (PA) efficacy cannot be established without biodiversity data that predates establishment of the PA. Spatial correlates of diversity are known as a result of centuries of ecological research; our analyses controlled for these factors in a variety of ways in order to isolate the impacts of protection per se on bird and mammal biodiversity. The proposition of Geldmann et al. that our results are biased because PAs were established in areas with high natural biodiversity ignores these analytical controls, is naive to the realities of on-the-ground conservation, and has been disproved by recent research. Although we look forward to future work that improves on our predictions, our study provides robust estimates of the biodiversity impacts of PAs across hyperdiverse Southeast Asia2—information that is critically needed to support large-scale conservation objectives. Springer Nature 2025 Article PeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47677/2/CAUSAL.pdf Jedediah F., Brodie and Mohd Azlan, Jayasilan and Cheng, Chen and Oliver R., Wearn and Mairin C. M., Deith and James G., C. Ball and Eleanor M., Slade and David F. R., P. Burslem and Shu, Woan Teoh and Peter J., Williams and Anh, Nguyen and Jonathan H., Moore and Scott J., Goetz (2025) Reply to: Causal claims, causal assumptions and protected area impact. Nature, 638. E42-E44. ISSN 1476-4687 https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-08513-7 https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08512-8
institution Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
building Centre for Academic Information Services (CAIS)
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
content_source UNIMAS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.unimas.my/
language English
topic QL Zoology
spellingShingle QL Zoology
Jedediah F., Brodie
Mohd Azlan, Jayasilan
Cheng, Chen
Oliver R., Wearn
Mairin C. M., Deith
James G., C. Ball
Eleanor M., Slade
David F. R., P. Burslem
Shu, Woan Teoh
Peter J., Williams
Anh, Nguyen
Jonathan H., Moore
Scott J., Goetz
Reply to: Causal claims, causal assumptions and protected area impact
description In the accompanying Comment, Geldmann et al.1 incorrectly claim that protected area (PA) efficacy cannot be established without biodiversity data that predates establishment of the PA. Spatial correlates of diversity are known as a result of centuries of ecological research; our analyses controlled for these factors in a variety of ways in order to isolate the impacts of protection per se on bird and mammal biodiversity. The proposition of Geldmann et al. that our results are biased because PAs were established in areas with high natural biodiversity ignores these analytical controls, is naive to the realities of on-the-ground conservation, and has been disproved by recent research. Although we look forward to future work that improves on our predictions, our study provides robust estimates of the biodiversity impacts of PAs across hyperdiverse Southeast Asia2—information that is critically needed to support large-scale conservation objectives.
format Article
author Jedediah F., Brodie
Mohd Azlan, Jayasilan
Cheng, Chen
Oliver R., Wearn
Mairin C. M., Deith
James G., C. Ball
Eleanor M., Slade
David F. R., P. Burslem
Shu, Woan Teoh
Peter J., Williams
Anh, Nguyen
Jonathan H., Moore
Scott J., Goetz
author_facet Jedediah F., Brodie
Mohd Azlan, Jayasilan
Cheng, Chen
Oliver R., Wearn
Mairin C. M., Deith
James G., C. Ball
Eleanor M., Slade
David F. R., P. Burslem
Shu, Woan Teoh
Peter J., Williams
Anh, Nguyen
Jonathan H., Moore
Scott J., Goetz
author_sort Jedediah F., Brodie
title Reply to: Causal claims, causal assumptions and protected area impact
title_short Reply to: Causal claims, causal assumptions and protected area impact
title_full Reply to: Causal claims, causal assumptions and protected area impact
title_fullStr Reply to: Causal claims, causal assumptions and protected area impact
title_full_unstemmed Reply to: Causal claims, causal assumptions and protected area impact
title_sort reply to: causal claims, causal assumptions and protected area impact
publisher Springer Nature
publishDate 2025
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47677/2/CAUSAL.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/47677/
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-08513-7
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08512-8
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