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Title
Priorities for improving the scientific foundation of conservation policy in north america
Author(s)
Noss R.F., Fleishman E., Dellasala D.A., Fitzgerald J.M., Gross M.R., Main M.B., Nagle F., O'Malley S.L., Rosales J.
Published
2009
Publisher
Conservation Biology
Published Version DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01282.x
Abstract
The Society for Conservation Biology (SCB) can enhance conservation of biodiversity in North America by increasing its engagement in public policy. Toward this end, the North America Section of SCB is establishing partnerships with other professional organizations in order to speak more powerfully to decision makers and taking other actions - such as increasing interaction with chapters - geared to engage members more substantively in science-policy issues. Additionally, the section is developing a North American Biodiversity Blueprint, which spans the continental United States and Canada and is informed by natural and social science. This blueprint is intended to clarify the policy challenges for protecting continental biodiversity, to foster bilateral collaboration to resolve common problems, and to suggest rational alternative policies and practices that are more likely than current practices to sustain North America's natural heritage. Conservation scientists and practitioners can play a key role by drawing policy makers' attention to ultimate, as well as proximate, causes of biodiversity decline and to the ecological and economic consequences of not addressing these threats. © 2009 Society for Conservation Biology.
Keywords
biodiversity; conservation planning; environmental economics; nature conservation; partnership approach; population decline; prioritization; North America
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PUB11880