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61.
Elemental Conservation Units: Communicating Extinction Risk without Dictating Targets for Protection
Abstract: Conservation biologists mostly agree on the need to identify and protect biodiversity below the species level but have not yet resolved the best approach. We addressed 2 issues relevant to this debate. First, we distinguished between the abstract goal of preserving the maximum amount of unique biodiversity and the pragmatic goal of minimizing the loss of ecological goods and services given that further loss of biodiversity seems inevitable. Second, we distinguished between the scientific task of assessing extinction risk and the normative task of choosing targets for protection. We propose that scientific advice on extinction risk be given at the smallest meaningful scale: the elemental conservation unit (ECU). An ECU is a demographically isolated population whose probability of extinction over the time scale of interest (say 100 years) is not substantially affected by natural immigration from other populations. Within this time frame, the loss of an ECU would be irreversible without human intervention. Society's decision to protect an ECU ought to reflect human values that have social, economic, and political dimensions. Scientists can best inform this decision by providing advice about the probability that an ECU will be lost and the ecological and evolutionary consequences of that loss in a form that can be integrated into landscape planning. The ECU approach provides maximum flexibility to decision makers and ensures that the scientific task of assessing extinction risk informs, but remains distinct from, the normative social challenge of setting conservation targets. 相似文献
62.
Residential Water Consumption,Motivation for Conserving Water and the Continuing Tragedy of the Commons 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Corral-Verdugo V Frías-Armenta M Pérez-Urias F Orduña-Cabrera V Espinoza-Gallego N 《Environmental management》2002,30(4):527-535
This paper explores the effect of the perception of externalities (PE) on residential water consumption. Externalities occur
when individuals make decisions that harm others, without concern for the impact or feeling a need to compensate for the harm.
The aim of this study was to investigate whether PE affects people's motivation to conserve water, and, consequently, the
practice of residential water consumption. Two hundred eighty Mexican citizens responded to a questionnaire investigating
how they perceived that other individuals in their community wasted water. Respondents were also asked about their motives
to conserve water, and direct observations of individual water consumption were recorded. Results were processed within a
structural equations model, which revealed that motives to conserve water significantly inhibit water consumption. Since the
perception of externalities also inhibits conservation motives, the resulting effect of PE on water consumption is positive.
This result means that the more people perceive that others waste water, the less their conservation motives, and, therefore,
the more their own water consumption. 相似文献
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