A2 Refereed review article in a scientific journal

An interoperable and standardized protocol for reporting systematic conservation planning projects




AuthorsJung, Martin; Adams, Vanessa M.; Alagador, Diogo; Álvarez‐Romero, Jorge G.; Araujo, Miguel B.; Arponen, Anni; Beger, Maria; Beher, Jutta; Carvalho, Silvia B.; Giakoumi, Sylvaine; Hanson, Jeffrey O.; Hermoso, Virgilio; Jantke, Kerstin; Kujala, Heini; McGowan, Jennifer; Metaxas, Anna; O'Connor, Louise; Salgado‐Rojas, Jose; Schuster, Richard; Smith, Bob; Visconti, Piero

Publisher John Wiley & Sons

Publication year2025

Journal:Conservation Science And Practice

Journal name in sourceConservation Science and Practice

Article numbere70097

Volume7

Issue7

ISSN2578-4854

eISSN2578-4854

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.70097

Web address https://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/csp2.70097

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/499374906


Abstract

Systematic conservation planning (SCP) is an operational and scientific framework that assists in deciding where, how, and when to implement conservation intervention. Studies using SCP approaches have proliferated due to their immediate relevance for applied conservation. For example, they can help identify cost-effective opportunities for expanding areas under conservation management to achieve high-level policy goals such as those of the Global Biodiversity Framework. Yet SCP can be conducted in various ways, and results can vary depending on problem formulation, parameterizations, contexts, and prioritization approaches. There is a need to facilitate comparison of SCP studies to understand key criteria and assumptions made in the planning process. Here, we propose a standardized reporting protocol for SCP that is readily applicable across study aims, realms, and spatial scales. The new Overview and Design Protocol for Systematic Conservation Planning (ODPSCP) describes the key steps from the design to the computational stages of SCP. It enables researchers, scientific editors, and decision- and policymakers to assess the scope and comprehensiveness of SCP exercises. To facilitate uptake and ease of reporting, the protocol is openly available through an interactive web interface and which can be further enhanced following methodological advancements in conservation planning. We encourage the conservation community to adopt the reporting protocol to promote transparency and reproducibility, standardized reporting as well as facilitate peer review and independent evaluation.


Downloadable publication

This is an electronic reprint of the original article.
This reprint may differ from the original in pagination and typographic detail. Please cite the original version.




Funding information in the publication
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft,Grant/Award Number: 390683824;Koneen Säätiö, Grant/Award Number:202203652; HORIZON EUROPE,Grant/Award Number: 101060429;Biodiversa+, Grant/Award Number:101052342; FWF, Grant/Award Number:10.55776/I6396; Fundaç˜ao para a Ciênciae Tecnologia, Grant/Award Number:10.54499/DivProtect/0008/2021; Fundaç˜aopara a Ciência e Tecnologia, Grant/AwardNumber: 10.54499/2022.04598.CEECIND/CP1730/CT0006


Last updated on 2025-15-10 at 14:03