2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2010.01598.x
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Establishing IUCN Red List Criteria for Threatened Ecosystems

Abstract: The potential for conservation of individual species has been greatly advanced by the International Union for Conservation of Nature's (IUCN) development of objective, repeatable, and transparent criteria for assessing extinction risk that explicitly separate risk assessment from priority setting. At the IV World Conservation Congress in 2008, the process began to develop and implement comparable global standards for ecosystems. A working group established by the IUCN has begun formulating a system of quantita… Show more

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Cited by 151 publications
(159 citation statements)
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“…CITES, 1973;European Commission, 2011;United Nations, 1976, 1992. The most challenging aspect stems from the complexity of biodiversity, that in itself comprises both multiple levels of organisation Despite the cutting edge importance of species Red Lists, the realisation that an approach focused exclusively on the species level is unfit to conserve all components of biodiversity led the scientific community, conservation professionals and institutions to be increasingly concerned with biodiversity assessments, addressing higher levels of biological organisation (Izco, 2015;Keith, 2009;Keith et al, 2013Keith et al, , 2015Kontula & Raunio, 2009;IUCN, 2015a;Nicholson, Keith, & Wilcove, 2009;Rodríguez et al, 2011Rodríguez et al, , 2012Rodríguez et al, , 2015. Ecological communities may more efficiently represent the biological diversity as a whole, compared to the species-level approach, which often lacks direct information about fundamental abiotic components, thus missing both the targets of protecting ecological patterns and processes, and ensuring the persistence of ecosystem functions and structure (Balmford et al, 2002;Cowling et al, 2004;Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, 2005;Noss, 1996; Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…CITES, 1973;European Commission, 2011;United Nations, 1976, 1992. The most challenging aspect stems from the complexity of biodiversity, that in itself comprises both multiple levels of organisation Despite the cutting edge importance of species Red Lists, the realisation that an approach focused exclusively on the species level is unfit to conserve all components of biodiversity led the scientific community, conservation professionals and institutions to be increasingly concerned with biodiversity assessments, addressing higher levels of biological organisation (Izco, 2015;Keith, 2009;Keith et al, 2013Keith et al, , 2015Kontula & Raunio, 2009;IUCN, 2015a;Nicholson, Keith, & Wilcove, 2009;Rodríguez et al, 2011Rodríguez et al, , 2012Rodríguez et al, , 2015. Ecological communities may more efficiently represent the biological diversity as a whole, compared to the species-level approach, which often lacks direct information about fundamental abiotic components, thus missing both the targets of protecting ecological patterns and processes, and ensuring the persistence of ecosystem functions and structure (Balmford et al, 2002;Cowling et al, 2004;Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, 2005;Noss, 1996; Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Accepted habitat classifications and spatial information on their distribution are therefore urgently needed, as recommended in a recent article (Rodríguez et al 2011). Once such data are available, we recommend the following addition to our methodology: A first biome-wide assessment of the distribution probability needs to be undertaken, comparing the expected and observed distribution probability of a habitat e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The resolution requested IUCN to "initiate a consultation process for the development, implementation and monitoring of a global standard for the assessment of ecosystem status, applicable at local, regional and global levels." Over the following four years, and with significant contributions from the scientific, government and conservation sectors, the IUCN Red List of Ecosystems Thematic Group of the Commission on Ecosystem Management (CEM) drafted an initial set of criteria (Version 1.0; Rodríguez et al, 2011). In subsequent years, the criteria were disseminated and tested globally across a suite of ecosystem types by a range of external partners and in collaboration with the IUCN Global Ecosystem Management Programme (GEMP).…”
Section: Development Of the Iucn Red List Of Ecosystemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These systematic assessments require a typology to ensure consistent and comparable ecosystem risk assessments across the area of assessment. The classification may simply delineate units at a particular thematic scale, or may describe their relationships using hierarchies or nested arrangements that span a range of thematic scales (Rodríguez et al, 2011).…”
Section: Ecosystem Typologiesmentioning
confidence: 99%