Publication | Closed Access
THE SCOPE AND TREATMENT OF THREATS IN ENDANGERED SPECIES RECOVERY PLANS
135
Citations
11
References
2002
Year
Conservation Management SystemBiodiversity LossBiodiversityEngineeringRecovery TasksNatural SciencesBiodiversity ConservationEvolutionary BiologyNature ConservationRecovery PlansEndangered Species BiologyRecovery EffortsConservation PlanningConservation Biology
The recovery of threatened and endangered species is complicated by the number, severity, and tractability of the threats facing each species. We investigated the nature and the treatment of threats in recovery plans for 181 threatened and endangered species. We examined the types of threats facing species, as well as the degree to which threats were understood and addressed. We found that >85% of all species faced at least four out of nine distinct types of threats. The most common threats were those related to resource use, exotic species, construction, and the alteration of habitat dynamics. Recovery plans lacked basic information about the magnitude, timing, frequency, or severity of 39% of all threats facing the 181 species. Likewise, 37% of all threats were not directly addressed with recovery tasks. Threats from pollution were more poorly understood than other threats, and threats from exotics were better addressed than other types of threats. Finally, we found that threats that were better understood were assigned recovery tasks more often than threats that were more poorly understood. Thus our results suggest that a lack of basic understanding of the nature of the threats facing threatened and endangered species may, in part, be undermining our recovery efforts.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1