Conservation Focus on Europe: Major Conservation Policy Issues That Need to Be Informed by Conservation Science

Andrew S. Pullin(Bangor University), Andràs Báldí(Hungarian Natural History Museum), Özgün Emre Can(Middle East Technical University), Martin Dieterich(University of Hohenheim), Vassiliki Kati(University of Ioannina), Barbara Livoreil, Gábor L. Löveï(Aarhus University), Barbara Mihók(Hungarian Natural History Museum), Owen T. Nevin(University of Cumbria), Nuria Selva(Institute of Nature Conservation), Isabel Sousa‐Pinto(Universidade do Porto)
Conservation Biology
July 13, 2009
Cited by 155Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Europe is one of the world's most densely populated continents and has a long history of human-dominated land- and seascapes. Europe is also at the forefront of developing and implementing multinational conservation efforts. In this contribution, we describe some top policy issues in Europe that need to be informed by high-quality conservation science. These include evaluation of the effectiveness of the Natura 2000 network of protected sites, implications of rapid economic and subsequent land-use change in Central and Eastern Europe, conservation of marine biodiversity and sustainability of fisheries, the effect of climate change on movement of species in highly fragmented landscapes, and attempts to assess the economic value of ecosystem services and biodiversity. Broad policy issues such as those identified are not easily amenable to scientific experiment. A key challenge at the science-policy interface is to identify the research questions underlying these problem areas so that conservation science can provide evidence to underpin future policy development.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis