AlpsLife
AlpsLife: Protect Alpine Life by monitoring and managing Alpine biodiversity for the future. “Observing globally, acting locally”.
Link to Alpine Space Programme
The Alps are a global biodiversity hotspot whose unique ecosystems are facing significant threats from climate change and land-use pressures. Efforts to conserve and restore Alpine biodiversity are often fragmented due to a lack of Alpine-wide coordination and varying biodiversity monitoring schemes across different countries.
The AlpsLife project aims to address these challenges by promoting science-based strategies and establishing a common framework for transnational cooperation. Relying on EU-relevant ecological indicators, AlpsLife ensures the interoperability of biodiversity data from multiple sources and assesses trends to create a shared understanding of biodiversity processes. By testing these indicators on the ground and adjusting them to meet the specific policy needs of Alpine countries, this project enables more effective cross-border management and decision-making to safeguard Alpine biodiversity.
This project is co-funded by the European Union through the Interreg Alpine Space programme and is a partnership across multiple scales and across the Alpine space. These collaborators include scientific institutions such as Eurac Research, Universität Innsbruck, and the Italian Institute for Environmental Protection and Research (ISPRA); the Alpine Network of Protected Areas (ALPARC); CIPRA Lab; and protected areas from various Alpine countries.
The Universität Innsbruck is responsible for collecting and refining high-resolution land-use/land-cover maps, calculating and mapping biodiversity relevant indicators and identifying “urgent-need-to-act” areas in the Alps.
Aims
Identify specific areas that need attention for conservation or ecological restoration policies.
Select EU indicators to be downscaled at the Alpine level and develop interoperability strategies which establish
a common understanding of conservation status of the Alpine biodiversity.
Implement the selected indicators on the ground by building on existing data and filling knowledge gaps.
Ensure consistency with the policy needs of the Alpine countries to better implement and utilise AlpsLife results in the long-term.
Results
A greater understanding of Alpine biodiversity status and trends with an Alpine Biodiversity Data Hub.
Science-based, unified strategies for biodiversity conservation and restoration, facilitating transnational strategies.
Incorporated project outcomes into long-term management plans for Alpine protected areas and regional/national
stakeholder strategies.
Project funding
Duration: September 2024 - August 2027
Total budget: € 2,916,176.40
Interreg funding: € 2,082,132.30