As a global community, we have a responsibility to ensure the long-term future of our natural heritage. As part of this, it is incumbent upon us to do all that we can to reverse the current trend of biodiversity loss, using all available tools at our disposal. One effective mean is safeguarding of those sites that are highest global priority for the conservation of biodiversity, whether through formal protected areas, community managed reserves, multiple-use areas, or other means. This special issue of the Journal of Threatened Taxa examines the application of the Key Biodiversity Area (KBA) approach to identifying such sites. Given the global mandate expressed through policy instruments such as the Convention on Biological Diversity (C...
In an era of human activities, global environmental changes, habitat loss and species extinction, co...
The term of biodiversity was first used un specialized conservation circles in the mid -1980's. In t...
Monitoring and research activities may hinder rather than improce conservation in tropical countries...
Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) provide geographic targets for the expansion of protected area coverag...
The key biodiversity areas (KBA) approach aims to identify globally important areas for species cons...
The primary objective of the key biodiversity areas (KBA) approach is to identify significant global...
Systematic conservation planning and Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) are the two most widely used appr...
Life on Earth is facing a sixth mass extinction, and the main driver of biodiversity loss is habitat...
Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) represent discrete sites that are globally vulnerable, irreplaceable, ...
Anthropocene biodiversity extinction rates are increasing, suggesting a possible sixth global mass e...
Biodiversity priority areas together should represent the biodiversity of the region they are situat...
Despite global environmental policies calling for expanded representative, well-connected and effect...
We report results from an end-user engagement process, convened by the International Union for Conse...
The chapter "Implementing and Monitoring Global Biodiversity Targets and Sustainable Development Goa...
Species extinctions and the deterioration of other biodiversity features worldwide have led to the a...
In an era of human activities, global environmental changes, habitat loss and species extinction, co...
The term of biodiversity was first used un specialized conservation circles in the mid -1980's. In t...
Monitoring and research activities may hinder rather than improce conservation in tropical countries...
Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) provide geographic targets for the expansion of protected area coverag...
The key biodiversity areas (KBA) approach aims to identify globally important areas for species cons...
The primary objective of the key biodiversity areas (KBA) approach is to identify significant global...
Systematic conservation planning and Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) are the two most widely used appr...
Life on Earth is facing a sixth mass extinction, and the main driver of biodiversity loss is habitat...
Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) represent discrete sites that are globally vulnerable, irreplaceable, ...
Anthropocene biodiversity extinction rates are increasing, suggesting a possible sixth global mass e...
Biodiversity priority areas together should represent the biodiversity of the region they are situat...
Despite global environmental policies calling for expanded representative, well-connected and effect...
We report results from an end-user engagement process, convened by the International Union for Conse...
The chapter "Implementing and Monitoring Global Biodiversity Targets and Sustainable Development Goa...
Species extinctions and the deterioration of other biodiversity features worldwide have led to the a...
In an era of human activities, global environmental changes, habitat loss and species extinction, co...
The term of biodiversity was first used un specialized conservation circles in the mid -1980's. In t...
Monitoring and research activities may hinder rather than improce conservation in tropical countries...