Peer-reviewed Journal Articles
Conservation International's science is the foundation for all our work. Our global science team is dedicated to advancing conservation science — pursuing actionable knowledge and amplifying it through partnerships and outreach.
To date, Conservation International has published more than 1,300 peer-reviewed articles, many in leading journals including Science, Nature and the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Here is an archive of our most recent research:
An inclusive, empirically grounded inventory facilitates recognition of diverse area-based conservation of nature
Siyu Qin, Yifan He, Rachel E. Golden Kroner, Sushma Shrestha, Bruno Henriques Coutinho, Marion Karmann, Juan Carlos Ledezma, Christian Martinez, Vilisa Morón-Zambrano, Roberto Ulloa, Edgard Yerena, Curtis Bernard, Joseph W. Bull, Eddy Mendoza, Nyls de Pracontal, Katie Reytar, Peter Veit, Erik Olsson, Clara L. Matallana-Tobón, Liz Alden Wily, Michael B. Mascia
One Earth, 7, 962-975
June 01, 2024
As the international community strives to conserve 30% of Earth’s lands and waters by 2030, the full extent of area-based conservation remains unclear. Official databases do not fully recognize and track the diversity of conservation-relevant governance systems, hindering conservation research, policy, planning, and action. Here, we describe and test an inclusive, empirically grounded approach to documenting area-based governance systems that potentially advance biodiversity conservation. Among Amazonian countries, we identify greater area coverage and diversity of conservation governance systems than official databases. We further illustrate the relevance of this approach using global examples of under-recognized conservation governance systems. Our findings highlight the need for an inclusive, empirically grounded inventory that reflects the full diversity of area-based conservation systems. We recommend researchers, governments, non-state actors, and donors to adopt similar inventories to increase feasibility, transparency, and inclusivity as a foundational component of global efforts to fulfill international commitments and create a nature-positive future.
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Qin, S., He, Y., Golden Kroner, R. E., Shrestha, S., Henriques Coutinho, B., Karmann, M., Ledezma, J. C., Martinez, C., Morón-Zambrano, V., Ulloa, R., Yerena, E., Bernard, C., Bull, J. W., Mendoza, E., de Pracontal, N., Reytar, K., Veit, P., Olsson, E., Matallana-Tobón, C. L., … Mascia, M. B. (2024). An inclusive, empirically grounded inventory facilitates recognition of diverse area-based conservation of nature. One Earth, 7(6), 962–975. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oneear.2024.03.005