Intended consequences statement
As the biodiversity crisis accelerates, the stakes are higher for threatened plants and animals. Rebuilding the health of our planet will require addressing underlying threats at many scales, including habitat loss and climate change. Conservation interventions such as habitat protection, management, restoration, predator control, translocation, genetic rescue, and biological control have the potential to help threatened or endangered species avert extinction. These existing, well-tested methods can be complemented and augmented by more frequent and faster adoption of new technologies, such as powerful new genetic tools. In addition, synthetic biology might offer solutions to currently intractable conservation problems. We believe that conservation needs to be bold and clear-eyed in this moment of great urgency.
Citation Information
| Publication Year | 2021 |
|---|---|
| Title | Intended consequences statement |
| DOI | 10.1111/csp2.371 |
| Authors | Ryan Phelan, Bridget Baumgartner, Stewart Brand, Evelyn Brister, Stanley Burgiel, R. Charo, Isabelle Coche, Al Cofrancesco, Jason Delborne, Owain Edwards, Joshua Fisher, Martin Gaywood, Doria Gordon, Gregg Howald, Margaret Hunter, Peter Kareiva, Aditi Mankad, Michelle Marvier, Katherine Moseby, Andrew Newhouse, Ben Novak, Gerry Ohrstrom, Steven Olson, Megan Palmer, Stephen Palumbi, Neil Patterson, Miguel Pedrono, Francisco Pelegri, Yasha Rohwer, Oliver Ryder, J. Saah, Robert Scheller, Philip Seddon, H. Shaffer, Beth Shapiro, Mike Sweeney, Mark Tercek, Delphine Thizy, Whitney Tilt, Michele Weber, Renee Wegrzyn, Bruce Whitelaw, Matthew Winkler, Josh Wodak, Mark Zimring, Paul Robbins |
| Publication Type | Article |
| Publication Subtype | Journal Article |
| Series Title | Conservation Science and Practice |
| Index ID | 70230116 |
| Record Source | USGS Publications Warehouse |
| USGS Organization | Wetland and Aquatic Research Center |