Conserving tropical nature: current challenges for ecologists

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Tropical biodiversity continues to erode unabated, which calls for ecologists to address the problem directly, placing less reliance on indirect interventions, such as community-based development schemes. Ecologists must become more assertive in providing scientifically formulated and adaptively managed interventions, involving biodiversity payments, to serve local, regional and global interests in tropical nature. Priorities for tropical ecologists thus include the identification of key thresholds to ecological resilience, and the formulation of clear monitoring protocols and management strategies for implementation by local resource managers. A particular challenge is to demonstrate how nature reserves contribute to the adaptive capacity of regional land-use matrices and, hence, to the provision of sustainable benefits at multiple spatial and temporal scales. View source
Year

2004

Secondary Title

Trends in Ecology & Evolution

Volume

19

Number

1

Pages

12-17

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2003.09.018

Language

Keyword(s)

wildlife management, conservation, forests, biodiversity, fire, environment, resilience, hypothesis, indonesia, tanzania, Environmental Sciences & Ecology, Evolutionary Biology, Genetics &, Heredity

Classification
Form: Journal Article
Geographical Area: Indonesia, Other

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