Back to Search Start Over

Ten-year assessment of the 100 priority questions for global biodiversity conservation

Authors :
Charlotte L. R. Payne
Martina Kunz
Miriam K. Guth
Emma Garnett
Hannah S. Mumby
Javier Igea
Matheus Henrique Nunes
Colleen Corrigan
Leslie-Anne Duvic-Paoli
Claire F. R. Wordley
Judith Schleicher
Elizabeth J. Green
Nibedita Mukherjee
Josephine Chambers
Alexandra Bell
Tim Kasoar
William Lynam
Jéssica Fonseca da Silva
Benno I. Simmons
Chloe Orland
Anca Serban
Boris Bongalov
Aiora Zabala
Andrew Hacket-Pain
Eleanor R. Tew
Rebecca J. Robertson
Catherine Tayleur
Victoria Plutshack
Jan Laurens Geffert
Gorm E. Shackelford
Philip A. Martin
Sarah H. Luke
Tatsuya Amano
Nancy Ockendon
Caroline E. Emilson
Amy Hinsley
David Christian Rose
Tim T. Rademacher
Aly Pavitt
Erik J. S. Emilson
Pierre Bocquillon
Tommaso Jucker
Eszter Krasznai Kovács
Bonnie C. Wintle
América Paz Durán
Source :
Conservation Biology. 32:1457-1463
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Wiley, 2018.

Abstract

In 2008, a group of conservation scientists compiled a list of 100 priority questions for the conservation of the world's biodiversity. However, now almost a decade later, no one has yet published a study gauging how much progress has been made in addressing these 100 high-priority questions in the peer-reviewed literature. We took a first step toward reexamining the 100 questions to identify key knowledge gaps that remain. Through a combination of a questionnaire and a literature review, we evaluated each question on the basis of 2 criteria: relevance and effort. We defined highly relevant questions as those that - if answered - would have the greatest impact on global biodiversity conservation and quantified effort based on the number of review publications addressing a particular question, which we used as a proxy for research effort. Using this approach, we identified a set of questions that, despite being perceived as highly relevant, have been the focus of relatively few review publications over the past 10 years. These questions covered a broad range of topics but predominantly tackled 3 major themes: conservation and management of freshwater ecosystems, role of societal structures in shaping interactions between people and the environment, and impacts of conservation interventions. We believe these questions represent important knowledge gaps that have received insufficient attention and may need to be prioritized in future research.

Details

ISSN :
08888892
Volume :
32
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Conservation Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........36c84bfb0fda58ba8006e7f9377100fb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.13159