Ecology and Society (Dec 2002)

The Influence of the Academic Conservation Biology Literature on Endangered Species Recovery Planning

  • John Stinchcombe,
  • Leonie C. Moyle,
  • Brian R. Hudgens,
  • Philip L. Bloch,
  • Sathya Chinnadurai,
  • William F. Morris

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-00444-060215
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
p. 15

Abstract

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Despite the volume of the academic conservation biology literature, there is little evidence as to what effect this work is having on endangered species recovery efforts. Using data collected from a national review of 136 endangered and threatened species recovery plans, we evaluated whether recovery plans were changing in response to publication trends in four areas of the academic conservation biology literature: metapopulation dynamics, population viability analysis, conservation corridors, and conservation genetics. We detected several changes in recovery plans in apparent response to publication trends in these areas (e.g., the number of tasks designed to promote the recovery of an endangered species shifted, although these tasks were rarely assigned a high priority). Our results indicate that, although the content of endangered species recovery plans changes in response to the literature, results are not uniform across all topics. We suggest that academic conservation biologists need to address the relative importance of each topic for conservation practice in different settings. [See Erratum]

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