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2: Conservation Management

  • Page ID
    160469
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    • 2.1: Scale of Action
      This page discusses biological conservation management, which relies on ecological evidence for achieving defined objectives via consensus or legislation. It highlights Earth's closed system for matter and open system for energy, affecting global stability and raising concerns about climate change. The biosphere's resources are categorized into fixed and current types, essential for ecological stability.
    • 2.2: Systems Thinking
      This page discusses ecological thinking, focusing on how organisms are impacted by environmental factors and human activities. It highlights the importance of understanding species distributions and behaviors to inform effective conservation management. Essential components include energy flow, nutrient cycling, and community classifications, all aimed at efficient resource management.
    • 2.3: Strategies and Operations
      This page outlines the evolution of conservation management since the 1992 Earth Summit, highlighting the need for integration of environmental, economic, and social goals. It introduces cultural ecology, relating conservation to exploitative practices and stresses the importance of adaptive management for ecosystem sustainability.
    • 2.4: Conservation Management Systems
      This page outlines conservation management systems (CMS) as vital for the preservation of species and habitats, detailing the UK's conservation history from post-WWII efforts to the creation of the Nature Conservancy Council. It stresses the importance of standardization in managing conservation tasks and improving practices through relational databases for tracking activities and outcomes, ensuring effective management and monitoring of conservation initiatives.
    • 2.5: Scope of Conservation Management
      This page discusses conservation management, focusing on the regulation of environmental and socioeconomic factors to improve material efficiency and sustain ecosystems. It highlights the shift towards sustainable practices in managing biological resources such as agriculture and fisheries. Since 1992, strategies have aimed to align conservation with economic and social objectives.
    • 2.6: Fundamental Scientific Questions
      This page discusses the role of conservation managers as naturalists who apply science to address diverse ecological challenges. It highlights unanswered ecological questions regarding organisms' interactions with their environment and emphasizes the need for adaptive management strategies due to the complexities of open environmental systems. Management plans are portrayed as evolving research tools, refined through ongoing responses from the ecosystem.
    • 2.7: References
      This page presents influential works on conservation and ecological theory by key authors like Gifford Pinchot. It highlights the evolution of conservation efforts and sustainable practices through various contributions in cultural geography and biological management, reflecting the ongoing discourse in conservation biology over several decades.


    2: Conservation Management is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.