Source: PNAS, vol.105,no.32 (August 2008)
"Here we present a priority-setting framework that seeks to minimize the conflicts and opportunity costs of meeting conservation goals. We use it to derive a new set of priority areas for investment in mammal conservation based on (i) agricultural opportunity cost and biodiversity importance, (ii)current levels of international funding, and (iii) degree of threat. Our approach achieves the same biodiversity outcomes as Ceballos et al.’s while reducing the opportunity costs and conflicts with agricultural human activity by up to 50%. We uncover shortfalls in the allocation of conservation funds in many threatened priority areas, highlighting a global conservation challenge."
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Cost-effective priorities for global mammal conservation
Posted by library@EPA at 2:48 PM
Labels: Conservation, Wildlife