Professor Emily Nicholson is a conservation scientist whose work has impacts on conservation policy and practice at global and local levels. Her research interests include biodiversity monitoring and ...
IUCN CEM Red List of Ecosystems Thematic Group
Group leadership
Prof Emily NICHOLSON
Professor Emily Nicholson is a conservation scientist whose work has impacts on conservation policy and practice at global and local levels. Her research interests include biodiversity monitoring and risk assessment, conservation decision-making, and ecosystem conservation science. She co-leads the IUCN Red List of Ecosystems thematic group in the Commission on Ecosystem Management, and co-chairs the Ad Hoc Scientific and Technical Advisory Group on the global review of progress towards the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework under the UN Convention on Biological Diversity. She has >100 scientific publications, including in Nature and Science, cited over 8800 times, and has been awarded >$10M in external competitive grants, including several prestigious research fellowships including an Australia Research Council Future Fellowship.
Dr José Rafael FERRER-PARIS
I am a Research Fellow at the Centre for Ecosystem Science in the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. I am member of the IUCN Commission on Ecosystem Management, in which I contribute as a member of the Red List of Ecosystems Thematic Group and the Green Status of Ecosystems Task Force, as well as an appointed member of the Scientific Committee of the Global Ecosystem Typology.
In my research role I develop methods and frameworks to inform ecosystem science and the conservation of biological diversity. My research is influencing global and national policy on conservation.
I am a Research Fellow at the Centre for Ecosystem Science in the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. I am member of the IUCN Commission on Ecosystem Management, in which I contribute as ...
Since 1950, humans have changed ecosystems at a faster rate than in any other period in history. Therefore, it is necessary that public policies have a solid foundation to curb or reduce these losses. However, efforts to monitor the status of ecosystems were hindered by the lack of a consistent scientific framework, with transparent criteria to identify which of these ecosystems were more likely to disappear. Upon recognition of this important scientific void, the IV IUCN World Conservation Congress (Barcelona, Spain, 5-14 October 2008) approved a motion to initiate the development of a global standard for assessing ecosystem risk, which was officially recognized by IUCN in 2014.
Overview
The IUCN Red List of Ecosystems (RLE) seeks to assess the healthy condition and threat levels faced by each ecosystem, as well as to identify the most effective management pathways to reduce risks and loss of biodiversity. Given the environmental that our planet is going through, the RLE is very relevant to better understand the dynamics and processes of ecosystems, identify which ecosystems are healthy and which are at risk of collapsing, identifying the main threats and possible ways to mitigate or eliminate their impact and monitoring the impact of conservation measures in order to identify the most effective and efficient ones.
RLE website:
RLE social media:
https://twitter.com/redlisteco
https://www.instagram.com/redlist_of_ecosystems/
Resources and publications:
https://iucnrle.org/global-eco-typo
IUCN Red List of Ecosystems in the Post-2020 global biodiversity framework (publication)
Impacts of the IUCN Red List of Ecosystems on conservation policy and practice (publication)
https://iucnrle.org/news/iucn-red-list-of-ecosystems-in-the-post-2020-global-biodiversity-framework (event)