Implementation of the NBSAP
The content of this biodiversity profile is still draft. The text below has been prepared by SCBD and remains subject to final approval by the Party concerned.
Israel's National Biodiversity Strategic Plan (NBS), officially termed the “National Plan for Conservation of Israel's Biodiversity”, was adopted in January 2010. The NBS has various components that are included in nine chapters: it presents and discusses the importance of biodiversity; identifies present and future threats to Israel's biodiversity; discusses various biodiversity conservation policies and management guidelines required to address the threats via management of biodiversity and ecosystems; recommends on supportive measures, using regional planning and legal tools and adopting financial incentives and other economic tools that internalize the dependence of development on ecosystem services, promoting research and monitoring, education and public awareness, enforcement and international cooperation; and finally assembles the recommendations to a proposed operational action plan.
Actions taken to achieve the 2020 Aichi Biodiversity Targets
The content of this biodiversity profile is still draft. The text below has been prepared by SCBD and remains subject to final approval by the Party concerned.
Multiple actions and programs have been carried out to achieve the 2020 Aichi Biodiversity Targets. Great efforts have notably been made in terms of conservation. In 2008, nature reserves and national parks that have been officially declared covered 20% of Israel’s land area, though some habitats are only poorly represented. Active management programs are implemented for several endangered species, with future plans to include several more species. For instance, the African Softshell Turtle, a critically endangered species in the Mediterranean region, was relocated from a natural refuge that it inhabited for the last 40 years back to its original habitat – the coastal stream. Also, new active management concepts have been introduced in protected and in other open landscape. They include: wetland habitat restoration through increased water availability, better water quality and modification of land features to increase structural diversity; woodland thinning to increase woodland and shrubland biodiversity and decrease the risk of wild fires; prevention of sand dune stabilization to increase habitat heterogeneity and biodiversity; driving out domestic herds from nature reserves allowing only controlled grazing there; controlling public use of open landscape (restricting the use of 4X4 vehicles, restricting entrance to protected areas, restricting hunting and harvesting); and decreasing disturbance to coral reefs in the Gulf of Eilat. The in situ protection of within-species genetic diversity is carried out on a very limited scale through the protection of small isolated populations via reinforcement, targeted protected areas and maintaining connectivity through ecological corridors. In parallel, ex situ genetic conservation is carried out by collection of seeds to the Israel Gene Bank (IGB) and through collection and rearing of individuals in botanic and zoological gardens and zoos. The IGB’s base collection contains over 26,000 accessions belonging to 1,144 species and a wide collection of landraces. Furthermore, a special program for the conservation of rare and endangered plant species on a national scale is currently being prepared by a professional team led by Israel Nature and Parks Authority (INPA), aiming to upgrade the attention to rare plant and animal conservation. Preliminary lists of invasive species have finally been prepared by INPA and academics, followed by specific surveys and research.
Support mechanisms for national implementation (legislation, funding, capacity-building, coordination, mainstreaming, etc.)
The content of this biodiversity profile is still draft. The text below has been prepared by SCBD and remains subject to final approval by the Party concerned.
Regulative tools include some 15 laws protecting habitats and ecosystems, along with special sites, natural assets and trees, while indirect protection to habitats is given through legislative tools regulating land and water uses. Most important pieces of legislation are the National Parks, Nature Reserves, National Sites and Memorial Sites Law and the Protected Natural Assets Law, which provide the legal structure for the protection of natural habitats, natural assets, wildlife and sites of scientific, historic, architectural and educational interest in Israel; the National Master Plan for Nature Reserves and National Parks; the Comprehensive National Master Plan for Building, Development and Conservation; a 2004 amendment to the Water Law, which allocated 50 million m3 water for wetland conservation and rehabilitation; and finally the 2004 Protection of the Coastal Environment Law. Moreover, economic tools for biodiversity conservation are under development, mainly through research studies on the benefits and economic values of ecosystem services and of various types of landscapes and natural assets.
Special attention is drawn to the mainstreaming of biodiversity conservation issues into relevant policy sectors. The major platform to sectoral and cross-sectoral integration is constituted by the National Committee for Sustainable Development (NCSD), which is composed of representatives of relevant government departments, the private sector and civil society. Moreover, extensive cooperation is organized among several administrative bodies: the Ministry of Education collaborates with the Ministry of Environmental Protection (MoEP), Israel Nature Reserves and Parks Authority (INPA), Keren Kayemeth LeIsrael–the Jewish National Fund (JNF-KKL) and various NGOs in developing and implementing educational programs on nature protection and conservation and on sustainable development; the Ministry of Agriculture is currently preparing a strategic plan, with special attention to open landscape conservation, handling natural hazards to agriculture and to policy regarding IAS; the Ministry of Interior is concerned with biodiversity conservation and the protection of open landscape mainly through its planning administration, concerning national, regional and local planning; finally, the Ministry of Science promotes research on biodiversity conservation, mainly through financial support to the Israel Gene Bank (IGB), national biological collections, marine biological research, national and regional biodiversity research projects.
The preparation of the National Biodiversity Strategic Plan (NBS) was domestically funded, with limited resources. Yet some activities where Israel joined an international initiative (such as the EBONE/BIOHAB monitoring scheme) received external funding.
Mechanisms for monitoring and reviewing implementation
The content of this biodiversity profile is still draft. The text below has been prepared by SCBD and remains subject to final approval by the Party concerned.
Regarding monitoring of the National Biodiversity Strategic Plan (NBS), two Red Data books were compiled (the Red List of Threatened Vertebrate Species and the first of two volumes of the Red Book of Endangered Plants of Israel) and a National Biodiversity Monitoring Framework was developed, which notably promotes the development of landscape (habitat and ecosystem) and species diversity mapping, monitoring of the dynamics of woody vegetation (serving as indicators for climate change and for important ecosystem function), as well as monitoring of disturbances, drought, invasive species, management practices and their impact.