Optimising biodiversity offsetting to account for habitat succession and species colonisation dynamics
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Biodiversity offsetting schemes aim to balance habitat loss from development through conservation and restoration, yet their long-term ecological outcomes under repeated impact-offset cycles remain uncertain. Using a conceptual modelling framework based on forest succession, we show that offsetting success hinges on two critical factors: the scale of habitat compensation and the duration of conservation commitments. We show that effective offsetting requires not only restoring areas larger than those impacted, but also sustaining conservation over timeframes that align with the ecological timescales of habitat development. Rapid habitat conversion consistently undermines offset success, particularly since the persistence and recovery of habitat-dependent, colonising species are highly sensitive to how quickly habitats are lost, how long restoration sites are protected, and how much time they need to reach sufficient habitat quality. Moreover, we show that short-term improvements do not necessarily meet long-term biodiversity targets. Given that habitat succession unfolds over decades or more, offset policies must move beyond short-term metrics. We emphasise that offsetting schemes must be scrutinized to ensure sufficient spatial compensation and time for habitat succession. Offsetting schemes should also account for different ecological indicators to avoid the ecological fallacy of short-term restoration success resulting in long-term biodiversity and ecosystem integrity loss.