Durban, South Africa, 5 December 2018 - You may have seen the University of Cambridge/Conservation Evidence stand at AEWA MOP 7 – if you haven’t, do head along and find out more.
Conservation Evidence is a project gathering the scientific evidence for how well conservation actions work, from reducing
seabird bycatch to
legal protection of species and habitats. They are collecting information on the effectiveness of ways to save all species and all habitats everywhere in the world; they estimate that they are about two-thirds of the way there, having already gathered over 5,000 studies. Ways to conserve
birds were covered in 2013 with over 1,200 studies documenting 322 actions, and an update is underway to add 500 new studies. Best of all, all the information is available for free in a
user-friendly online format. Conservation Evidence also has an
open-access journal where tests of conservation actions can be published.
For each intervention (such as ‘
use decoys to attract birds to safe areas’ or ‘
translocate auks’), each scientific paper is summarized in a single, jargon-free paragraph, and the key messages are extracted from all papers to provide a quick overview of the topic. A map shows the location of the studies on that intervention globally, and experts review the evidence and score every intervention for its effectiveness, the certainty of the evidence, and any harmful side effects, placing each intervention into an effectiveness category from ‘beneficial’ to ‘likely to be ineffective or harmful.’ You can find more information on
data collection and the
expert scoring process on the website.
Conservation Evidence and AEWA have partnered for some time, with a page explaining Conservation Evidence on the
AEWA website, every AEWA species page linking to the relevant search results from Conservation Evidence, and indicator 3.4 in the
AEWA Strategic Plan 2009-2017 being 50 best practices collated and published at
www.conservationevidence.com. This partnership can be expanded by Parties to the Agreeement using Conservation Evidence when they are choosing potential conservation actions; checking the evidence makes it more likely that the most effective conservation actions will be chosen.