Contents
The course will include the following topics:
- Foundations of value and priority setting in conservation.
- Compositional versus functionalist perspectives on biodiversity.
- Scoring, complementarity, and optimisation approaches to spatial prioritisation.
- Biodiversity hotspots, Gap Analysis, and related prioritisation schemes.
- Use of niche (species distribution) models, metapopulation theory, and persistence-focused design in conservation planning.
- Climate change and the concept of dynamic conservation planning, including climate refugia and shifting priorities.
- Beyond composition: rewilding, functional restoration, and process-based approaches to conservation planning.
By the end of the course, you will:
- Understand the main theoretical frameworks underlying spatial conservation planning.
- Be able to compare and critically assess alternative prioritisation approaches (scoring, complementarity, hotspots, Gap Analysis, etc.).
- Gain familiarity with how niche models, metapopulation concepts, and persistence criteria are used to design conservation networks.
- Be able to discuss how climate change and dynamic landscapes affect conservation priorities and planning strategies.
- Develop the capacity to critically evaluate published spatial conservation plans and to articulate their own prioritisation rationale.


Lecturer
Miguel Bastos Araújo is a biogeographer and conservation biologist known for his work on the effects of climate change on biodiversity. He is a highly-cited scientist and has received numerous awards for his contributions to the field. A Research Professor at the National Museum of Natural Sciences in Spain, he is now a sabbatical visitor in iDIV.