CEPF
Bookmark and Share
 

CEPF STRATEGIC DIRECTIONS CEPF INVESTMENT PRIORITIES
1. Enable action by diverse communities and partnerships to ensure conservation of key biodiversity areas and enhance connectivity in the corridors

1.1  Test pilot models of community and private reserves to achieve conservation outcomes at priority sites and critical links in unprotected areas of the Anamalai and Malnad-Kodagu corridors as well as the Brahmagiri-Nagarhole critical link in the Mysore-Nilgiri corridor

1.2  Promote partnerships to identify, evaluate, and advocate for suitable mechanisms that incorporate critical links (biological corridors) into the protected area network in the Periyar-Agastyamalai, Mysore-Nilgiri and Malnad-Kodagu corridors

1.3  Support civil society to establish partnerships with state agencies to implement science-based management and conservation of priority sites in the Mysore-Nilgiri corridor
2. Improve the conservation of globally threatened species through systematic conservation planning and action

2.1  Monitor and assess the conservation status of globally threatened species with an emphasis on lesser-known organisms such as reptiles and fish

2.2  Support efforts to conserve Critically Endangered and Endangered species through the creation and implementation of species recovery and management plans

2.3  Evaluate the existing protected area network for adequate globally threatened species representation and assess effectiveness of protected area types in biodiversity conservation

2.4  Support interdisciplinary efforts to analyze and disseminate biodiversity data
3. Provide strategic leadership and effective coordination of CEPF investment through a regional implementation team

3.1  Build a broad constituency of civil society groups working across institutional and political boundaries toward achieving the shared conservation goals described in the ecosystem profile

 

The CEPF niche for investment is based on analyses of conservation outcomes, threats to biodiversity, current conservation investments in the region, and stakeholder consultations. Throughout the hotspot, unique habitats rich in biodiversity in both protected and unprotected areas intersect with a highly fragmented, human-dominated landscape. Conservation activities within protected areas need to be strengthened and the substantial biodiversity in the adjoining unprotected areas must be conserved. Because these areas face a complex array of threats, biodiversity conservation within this landscape can only be effective with the active involvement of civil society in protecting and restoring biodiversity in public as well as private lands. The timing of such efforts is critical, as demographic and economic pressures on the landscape continue to mount.

CEPF’s niche in the Western Ghats will be to provide incremental support to existing protected area efforts and generate momentum for biodiversity conservation around protected areas to enhance habitat connectivity and enable greater civil society participation in conservation efforts.

To refine the CEPF niche, CEPF investment will focus on 80 key biodiversity areas predominately located within the five corridors identified (the Anamalai, Malnad-Kodagu, Mysore-Nilgiri, Periyar-Agasthyamalai, and Sahyadri-Konkan corridors). CEPF will provide incremental support to the 37 (46 percent) sites within the existing protected area network. The remaining 54 percent of the sites consist of reserved forests and private lands such as plantation estates. These areas are significant for biodiversity conservation in the Western Ghats as: i) some globally threatened species are found only in these lands, ii) significant populations of Endangered species occur in these lands, and iii) several landscape species such as tigers use these areas for feeding or transit.

Priority corridors are indicated for some of the investment priorities based on ecological and socioeconomic processes within the corridors that were deemed likely to influence the success or failure of conservation activities. This prioritization was based on expert knowledge and threat assessments conducted during the ecosystem profiling process.

Previous: Synopsis of Current Investment / Next: CEPF Investment Strategy

 
 
 
Download 
Document: Western Ghats & Sri Lanka Ecosystem Profile, Western Ghats, May 2007 
English (PDF - 1.9 MB)

Document: Fact Sheet
English (PDF - 136 KB)

Document: GEF Focal Point endorsement (PDF - 278 KB)