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A Rocha 2005-2007 Conservation Science ReviewThis web page only shows the Foreword and Contents of the Review. You may download the full report in PDF format (1.4 MB in size) - or order a printed copy from the International office. ForewordThis is the second published overview of A Rochas conservation science. The report highlights a broad spectrum of activity in the period 2005-2007, reflecting the diversity of natural and cultural contexts in which we work. Since the last edition, A Rocha has grown from 16 to 18 organisations worldwide, but, as importantly, it has been consolidating within each country, opening up new possibilities to make significant inroads for conservation.As a snapshot of progress, therefore, we hope that you will be encouraged by this Review and the advances made by A Rocha and its partners. At the same time, the snapshot of biodiversity status provided by the 2007 IUCN Red List underlines the increasing size of the task at hand. There are now 41,415 species on the Red List including 16,306 threatened with extinction. One in four mammals, one in eight birds and one third of all amphibians are in jeopardy. As IUCNs Director General Julia Marton-Lefèvre points out, the invaluable efforts to protect species are not enough. And the result is not just an impoverished biosphere, but also the undermining of human livelihoods. Head of IUCNs Species Programme, Jane Smart, comments: Our lives are inextricably linked with biodiversity and ultimately its protection is essential for our very survival. As the world begins to respond to the current crisis of biodiversity loss, the information from the IUCN Red List is needed to design and implement effective conservation strategies for the benefit of people and nature. Such inextricable links show themselves in physical, emotional and spiritual wellbeing, from the drylands of sub-Saharan Africa (see page 26) to the urban parks of the UK (page 24). A recently published study from Sheffield indicates how increased biodiversity enhances still further the already positive psychological benefits of greenspaces. A Rocha has always believed in and promoted the joy of biodiversity, but we would want to go further in stating the moral imperative of restoring the ecosystems that support the poor, and fulfilling much better the Godgiven mandate of creation care. Where does the Red List news leave A Rocha and its many conservation partners? It is clear that if the conservation endeavour is shouldered by conservation practitioners alone, progress will be measured, at best, by a moderated rate of species decline. A Rocha has signed up to the more ambitious Countdown 2010 target to halt the loss of biodiversity by that year, a commitment reinforced by 51 Governments at Kiev, Ukraine in 2003, but neither does this look feasible without more wholesale change. A Rochas own stated vision is for Communities world-wide mobilised to restore ecosystems and recognise the relevance of Christian belief for environmental action. This implies a number of approaches.
The articles that follow describe projects that give rise to some of those stories and illustrate the range of research and monitoring tracks that together arrive at the desired end-goal: practical measures to restore habitats and their wildlife. We hope you enjoy this Review and thank you for your support of this vital work of our times. Will Simonson, Scientific Director A Rocha International Contents
This web page only shows the Foreword and Contents of the Review. You may download the full report in PDF format (1.4 MB in size) - or order a printed copy from the International office. |