What is a KBA?
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What is a Key Biodiversity Area?

Key biodiversity areas are places of international importance for the conservation of biodiversity at the global level. The concept of 'Key Biodiversity Areas' (KBAs for short) has been developed by a coalition of biodiversity conservation organisations including BirdLife International, Conservation International, and PlantLife International to designate sites of global conservation importance based on objective scientific criteria. In Turkey, the scientific task involved in designating the KBAs has been carried out by Doğa Derneği, with the support of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds.

KBAs are sites that are large enough or sufficiently interconnected to support viable populations of the species for which they are important. The KBA selection process uses four criteria based on the presence of four categories of species for which site-scale conservation is appropriate:

1) Globally threatened species;
2) Restricted-range species;
3) Congregations of species that concentrate in large numbers at particular sites during some stage in their life cycle; and
4) Biome-restricted assemblages.

The first of these four criteria addresses vulnerability, while the latter three cover different components of irreplaceability.

 

Tuz Lake
Photo: Hakan Öge / ATLAS

The first criterion applies to areas that hold important populations of threatened species. Due to increasing levels of human pressures, the majority of the threatened species that have been identified in need of conservation are often located in few numbers of areas. An example of such a species in Turkey is the Great bustard (Otis tarda), a species that used to be found throughout most steppic and agricultural areas up until 50 years ago. Now, its presence is limited to 20-30 sites in Turkey. These few remaining sites are generally the last large patches of Anatolian steppes and areas where traditional agricultural practices continue and where hunting activities remain minimal. Using data on endangered species, this KBA criterion identifies 'vulnerable' landscapes of a given country or another geographic unit.

Independent of current or potential human pressures, some natural and/or semi-natural areas contain unique characteristics which distinguish them from their immediate surroundings and stand out for their often particularly well defined natural boundaries. The epitome of such an area in Turkey is the Tuz Lake Basin in Central Anatolia, the biogeographic remnant of an ancient inner sea. The Tuz Lake Basin supports some of the most extensive Anatolian steppes and is characterised as the exclusive habitat for some unique salt tolerant plants and other species. During specific times of a given year, the lake and its neighbouring ecosystems host significant numbers of the world populations of greater flamingos (Phoenicopterus ruber), cranes (Grus grus), and white-fronted geese (Anser albifrons). The future of these species depends directly on the existence of this complex landscape.

KBA criteria to determine irreplaceable ecosystems such as the Tuz Lake comprise the latter three criteria: Restricted range species, Congregatory species and Biome-restricted assemblages.

For more than 20 years KBA criteria have been used all over the world to determine the Important Bird Areas (IBAs) and now are being applied to other taxonomic groups such as plants. Thus, the KBA concept now appeals to a much larger and holistic conservation challlenges.

Recently, a global initiative named "The Alliance for Zero Extinction" (AZE) (translated as Sıfır Yok Oluş in Turkish) has been launched to identify and protect the last remaining habitats for the world's most threatened species, acting as a front line defense against species extinctions. AZE sites host one or more terrestrial species that do not occur elsewhere on earth and are classified as Critically Endangered (CR) or Endangered (EN) categories defined by IUCN. In short, AZE sites meet the two main considerations for selecting KBAs, vulnerability and irreplaceability, at the same time for a single species.

 
   
   
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