Document of bibliographic reference 355262

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Conservation translocations from the ‘Global Reintroduction Perspectives’ series: Disease and other biological problems
Abstract
  • Conservation translocations, defined as population reinforcement, reintroduction, assisted colonization or ecological replacement, have become a popular tool in efforts to restore wildlife populations and their wider ecosystems. Given that conservation translocations remain challenging to undertake, and positive outcomes are not guaranteed, we should maximize opportunities to learn from the outcomes of previous projects.
  • Case studies of animal and plant conservation translocation published in the first six volumes (2008–2018) of the IUCN/SSC's ‘Global Reintroduction Perspectives’ series were reviewed. Alongside project metadata, the following self-reported information was extracted from the case studies: select project strategies and methods; information relating to any mortality, ill-health or poor fecundity; and health management practices.
  • Two hundred and ninety-five of the 351 case studies clearly described a discrete conservation translocation initiative for which releases were underway or complete at their time of publication. Sixty per cent of these 295 case studies were reintroductions. Mammals were the most commonly translocated taxon (29% of case studies), and projects were most often conducted in Oceania, Western Europe or North America or the Caribbean.
  • The data set presents information on disease and other biological problems self-reported in these conservation translocation case studies. It can inform health and wider management planning for future conservation translocation projects.
  • WebOfScience code
    https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000844513700001
    Bibliographic citation
    Beckmann, K.M.; Soorae, P.S. (2022). Conservation translocations from the ‘Global Reintroduction Perspectives’ series: Disease and other biological problems. Ecological Solutions and Evidence 3(3): e12163. https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/2688-8319.12163
    Access rights
    open access
    Is accessible for free
    true

    Authors

    author
    Name
    Katie Beckmann
    author
    Name
    Pritpal Soorae

    Links

    referenced creativework
    type
    DOI
    accessURL
    https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/2688-8319.12163

    Document metadata

    date created
    2022-08-31
    date modified
    2022-08-31