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Journal ArticleOpen Access

A strategy for the next decade to address data deficiency in neglected biodiversity

Author Affiliations
Trier University of Applied Sciences, International Union for Conservation of Nature, Universität Trier, Stellenbosch University, ...
Published InConservation Biology
Year2020
Citations194

Abstract

Measuring progress toward international biodiversity targets requires robust information on the conservation status of species, which the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species provides. However, data and capacity are lacking for most hyperdiverse groups, such as invertebrates, plants, and fungi, particularly in megadiverse or high-endemism regions. Conservation policies and biodiversity strategies aimed at halting biodiversity loss by 2020 need to be adapted to tackle these information shortfalls after 2020. We devised an 8-point strategy to close existing data gaps by reviving explorative field research on the distribution, abundance, and ecology of species; linking taxonomic research more closely with conservation; improving global biodiversity databases by making the submission of spatially explicit data mandatory for scientific…
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