Title
A Severe Lack of Evidence Limits Effective Conservation of the World's Primates
Date Issued
18 September 2020
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Junker J.
Petrovan S.O.
Arroyo-Rodríguez V.
Boonratana R.
Byler D.
Chapman C.A.
Chetry D.
Cheyne S.M.
Cortés-Ortiz L.
Cowlishaw G.
Christie A.P.
Crockford C.
Torre S.D.L.
De Melo F.R.
Fan P.
Grueter C.C.
Guzmán-Caro D.C.
Heymann E.W.
Herbinger I.
Hoang M.D.
Horwich R.H.
Humle T.
Ikemeh R.A.
Imong I.S.
Jerusalinsky L.
Johnson S.E.
Kappeler P.M.
Kierulff M.C.M.
Koné I.
Kormos R.
Le K.Q.
Li B.
Marshall A.J.
Meijaard E.
Mittermeier R.A.
Muroyama Y.
Neugebauer E.
Orth L.
Palacios E.
Papworth S.K.
Plumptre A.J.
Rawson B.M.
Refisch J.
Ratsimbazafy J.
Roos C.
Setchell J.M.
Smith R.K.
Sop T.
Schwitzer C.
Slater K.
Strum S.C.
Sutherland W.J.
Talebi M.
Wallis J.
Wich S.
Williamson E.A.
Wittig R.M.
Kühl H.S.
Stony Brook University
Publisher(s)
Oxford University Press
Abstract
Threats to biodiversity are well documented. However, to effectively conserve species and their habitats, we need to know which conservation interventions do (or do not) work. Evidence-based conservation evaluates interventions within a scientific framework. The Conservation Evidence project has summarized thousands of studies testing conservation interventions and compiled these as synopses for various habitats and taxa. In the present article, we analyzed the interventions assessed in the primate synopsis and compared these with other taxa. We found that despite intensive efforts to study primates and the extensive threats they face, less than 1% of primate studies evaluated conservation effectiveness. The studies often lacked quantitative data, failed to undertake postimplementation monitoring of populations or individuals, or implemented several interventions at once. Furthermore, the studies were biased toward specific taxa, geographic regions, and interventions. We describe barriers for testing primate conservation interventions and propose actions to improve the conservation evidence base to protect this endangered and globally important taxon.
Start page
794
End page
803
Volume
70
Issue
9
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Conservación de la Biodiversidad
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85090308279
Source
BioScience
ISSN of the container
00063568
Sponsor(s)
We thank the following people for helping with primate species data compilation and advice on the scope and content of the primate synopsis: Covadonga Alonso, Renata B. Azevedo, Gerson Buss, Marcos S. Fialho, Zhang Liu, Elizabeth Macfie, Amely B. Martins, Sanjay Molur, Justin O'Rian, David Osei, Anthony Rylands, Jatna Supriatna, Monica M. Valença- Montenegro, Liza M. Veiga (in memoriam), Xiao Wen, and Long Yongcheng. A special word of thanks to Anthony Rylands for providing valuable comments on an early draft of the manuscript. The study was funded by the Robert Bosch Foundation (authorization no. 32.5.8043.0016.0) at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology and the Arcadia Fund at the University of Cambridge. MT was funded by FAPESP grant no. 2016/08422-0. APC was funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (grant no. NE/L002507/1). All data are available from Junker and colleagues (2017), the Conservation Evidence website (www. conservationevidence.com), and the IUCN SSC Primate Specialist Group (www.primate-sg.org).
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus