: The delineation of nature by political borders and the restricted accessibility of ecological research data present intertwined challenges to global biodiversity conservation. We examined how the nationalization of biodiversity and the privatization of ecological data hinder effective cross-boundary management of natural resources and perpetuate socioeconomic inequities. The ecological consequences of imposing geopolitical boundaries on species distributions include fragmented management regimes, inconsistent protection across ranges, and misaligned conservation priorities for transboundary populations. Biases inherent in national species assessments lead to systematic misclassification of conservation status, distorted estimates of biodiversity change, and inefficient allocation of conservation resources across borders. The limitations arising from anthropocentric terminology in conservation science can reinforce false native-non-native dichotomies, obscure context-dependent ecological impacts, and undermine transboundary management coherence. We argue that existing conservation frameworks have struggled to address these challenges at scale due to entrenched institutional constraints. As a way forward, we advocate for supranational ecological governance grounded in open-access data, equitable funding, and collaborative frameworks that transcend political boundaries.

Intertwined threats of nationalized nature and privatized ecological research for global biodiversity conservation

Mammola, Stefano;
2026

Abstract

: The delineation of nature by political borders and the restricted accessibility of ecological research data present intertwined challenges to global biodiversity conservation. We examined how the nationalization of biodiversity and the privatization of ecological data hinder effective cross-boundary management of natural resources and perpetuate socioeconomic inequities. The ecological consequences of imposing geopolitical boundaries on species distributions include fragmented management regimes, inconsistent protection across ranges, and misaligned conservation priorities for transboundary populations. Biases inherent in national species assessments lead to systematic misclassification of conservation status, distorted estimates of biodiversity change, and inefficient allocation of conservation resources across borders. The limitations arising from anthropocentric terminology in conservation science can reinforce false native-non-native dichotomies, obscure context-dependent ecological impacts, and undermine transboundary management coherence. We argue that existing conservation frameworks have struggled to address these challenges at scale due to entrenched institutional constraints. As a way forward, we advocate for supranational ecological governance grounded in open-access data, equitable funding, and collaborative frameworks that transcend political boundaries.
2026
Istituto di Ricerca sulle Acque - IRSA - Sede Secondaria Verbania
conservación transfronteriza
ecological policy bias
equidad científica
gestión global de la biodiversidad
global biodiversity governance
open data policy
política de datos abiertos
scientific equity
sesgo de políticas ecológicas
transboundary conservation
全球生物多样性治理
开放数据政策
生态政策偏见
科学公平性
跨境保护
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/566812
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