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Preventing extinctions post-2020 requires recovery actions and transformative change

Authors :
Friederike C. Bolam
Philip J. K. McGowan
Thomas M. Brooks
Jon Paul Rodríguez
Sean Hoban
James E. M. Watson
David P. Mallon
Simon N. Stuart
Xiaoli Shen
Dilys Roe
H. Resit Akçakaya
Stuart H. M. Butchart
Mary Seddon
Louise Mair
Jorge A. Ahumada
Domitilla C. Raimondo
Wendy Elliott
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Stopping human-induced extinctions will require strong policy commitments that comprehensively address threats to species. In 2021, a new Global Biodiversity Framework will be agreed by the Convention on Biological Diversity. Here we investigate how the suggested targets could contribute to reducing threats to threatened vertebrates, invertebrates, and plants, and assess the importance of a proposed target to implement recovery actions for threatened species. We find that whilst many of the targets benefit species, extinction risk for over one third of threatened species would not be reduced sufficiently without a target on recovery actions, includingex situconservation, reintroductions and other species-specific interventions. A median of 41 threatened species per country require such actions, and they are found in most countries of the world. To prevent future extinctions, policy commitments must include recovery actions for the most threatened species in addition to broader transformative change.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6629324a9ed55b3cf05bd3fb92e91749