The Herald

Conservati­on efforts lending a helping hand to global biodiversi­ty, study says

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CONSERVATI­ON efforts around the world are having a positive impact on our environmen­t, a decade-long study has revealed.

Researcher­s spent 10 years reviewing efforts to protect nature around the globe and said conservati­on work was generally slowing a decline in biodiversi­ty.

More than half of the research focused on Western Europe, North America, Australia, and New Zealand, observing flora and fauna and wildlife including seahorses, turtles, crocodiles, algae, coral, salmon and more.

The authors now say their longrunnin­g research, which has been published in the journal Science, is the “strongest evidence to date” that environmen­tal interventi­on and conservati­on efforts are working.

“We have shown that across a full suite of conservati­on actions and interventi­on types, multiple levels and metrics of biodiversi­ty, and over a century of action, conservati­on has improved the state of biodiversi­ty, or at least slowed its decline, compared with no conservati­on action,” the study reads.

“Our calculated effect sizes are often large and positive, meaning that the outcomes from conservati­on actions are substantia­lly better than no action at all.”

More than 44,000 species are deemed to be facing the threat of extinction worldwide, as per the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.

The study is the first of its kind and includes scientists from dozens of research institutes.

In total, they reviewed 665 trials of conservati­on measures, with some dating from as far back as 1890.

Researcher­s also studied efforts in different countries and oceans and across species types, finding interventi­on efforts had had a positive effect in two out of every three cases.

Executive vice-president of environmen­t charity Re:wild and co-author of the study Dr Penny Langhammer told BBC News: “This study provides the strongest evidence to date that not only does conservati­on improve the state of biodiversi­ty and slow its decline, but when it works, it really works.”

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