Details zur Publikation

Kategorie Textpublikation
Referenztyp Buchkapitel
DOI 10.1007/978-3-030-81085-6_2
Titel (primär) Biodiversity monitoring and the role of scientists in the twenty-first century
Titel (sekundär) Closing the knowledge-implementation gap in conservation science: Interdisciplinary evidence transfer across sectors and spatiotemporal scales
Autor Ferreira, C.C.; Stephenson, P.J.; Gill, M.; Regan, E.C.
Herausgeber Ferreira, C.C.; Klütsch, C.F.C.
Quelle Wildlife Research Monographs
Erscheinungsjahr 2021
Department NSF
Band/Volume 4
Seite von 25
Seite bis 50
Sprache englisch
Topic T5 Future Landscapes
Keywords Expert-driven data collection; Biodiversity monitoring; Scale; Observation networks; Conservation objectives; Cross-cultural monitoring; Cross-sectoral conservation; Trans- and interdisciplinarity; Funding
UFZ Bestand Halle, Bibliothek, 00541114, 22-0014
Abstract Sustained monitoring of biological diversity is central to conservation biology as a discipline, allowing the evaluation of species and ecosystem conservation status, biological responses to environmental and policy changes, and conservation action. In this chapter, we look at the knowledge–implementation gap through the lens of biodiversity monitoring (hereafter, biomonitoring) to highlight the role of scientific inquiry as a stream of knowledge production in biodiversity conservation and the ways it can influence the width of the gap. Biomonitoring provides the perfect platform to discuss this. The knowledge it produces fundamentally underpins and informs all aspects of biodiversity conservation. Moreover, as a field of research, it is highly permeable to concurrently employ other sources of ecological knowledge, technological innovation, interdisciplinarity, and collaborative approaches. This means that the scientists leading these efforts likely embody the traits and skills most needed to successfully navigate and close the gap in the future, as scientists will continue to be major knowledge producers in this field. We outline the main features of traditional biomonitoring, with an emphasis on some of the challenges faced by the scientific community that may contribute to widening the knowledge–implementation gap in the discipline, as well as successful expert-driven initiatives that provide a good template to resolve said challenges.
dauerhafte UFZ-Verlinkung https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=25689
Ferreira, C.C., Stephenson, P.J., Gill, M., Regan, E.C. (2021):
Biodiversity monitoring and the role of scientists in the twenty-first century
In: Ferreira, C.C., Klütsch, C.F.C. (eds.)
Closing the knowledge-implementation gap in conservation science: Interdisciplinary evidence transfer across sectors and spatiotemporal scales
Wildlife Research Monographs 4
Springer, Cham, p. 25 - 50 10.1007/978-3-030-81085-6_2