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Related Concept Videos

What is Conservation Biology?01:57

What is Conservation Biology?

Conservation biology is a scientific field that focuses on the preservation of biodiversity in order to protect ecosystems while meeting the needs of the human population. Humans require properly functioning ecosystems to maintain our supply of natural resources, including food, medicines, and building materials.
Conservation of Declining Populations02:07

Conservation of Declining Populations

Conservation of declining population focuses on ways of detecting, diagnosing, and halting a population decline. The approach uses methods to prevent populations from going extinct.
Sustainable Development01:43

Sustainable Development

As the human population continues to grow and use resources, we must be mindful of our planet’s natural limits. Sustainable development provides a pathway to maintain and improve human life now while also ensuring that future generations will have the resources that they need. The long-term success of sustainability efforts rests on understanding the interplay between human actions and ecological systems.
Conservation of Small Populations02:04

Conservation of Small Populations

Small population sizes put a species at extreme risk of extinction due to a lack of variation, and a consequent decrease in adaptability. This weakens the chances of survival under pressures such as climate change, competition from other species, or new diseases. Large populations are more likely to survive pressures such as these, as such populations are more likely to harbor individuals that have genetic variants that are adaptive under new stresses. Small populations are much less likely to...
Habitat Fragmentation02:31

Habitat Fragmentation

Habitat fragmentation describes the division of a more extensive, continuous habitat into smaller, discontinuous areas. Human activities such as land conversion, as well as slower geological processes leading to changes in the physical environment, are the two leading causes of habitat fragmentation. The fragmentation process typically follows the same steps: perforation, dissection, fragmentation, shrinkage, and attrition.
Ecological Niches02:02

Ecological Niches

All organisms have a position within an ecosystem. The complete set of living and nonliving factors—including food resources, climate, and terrain—that define the position of a given organism are collectively referred to as the organism’s ecological niche.Multiple species cannot occupy the exact same niche within their habitat. If the niches of two or more species overlap to a large extent, the competitive exclusion principle dictates that one species will outcompete the other, forcing it to...

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Ecosystem-service science and the way forward for conservation.

Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology·2008
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Skin grafts and cheetahs.

Nature·1996
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Conservation: tactics for a constant crisis.

Science (New York, N.Y.)·1991
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Island lizards: the genetic-phenetic variation correlation.

Nature·1973
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 12, 2026

At-Risk Butterfly Captive Propagation Programs to Enhance Life History Knowledge and Effective Ex Situ Conservation Techniques
07:10

At-Risk Butterfly Captive Propagation Programs to Enhance Life History Knowledge and Effective Ex Situ Conservation Techniques

Published on: February 11, 2020

ECOLOGY: Conservation Targets: Do They Help?

M E Soulé, M A Sanjayan

    Science (New York, N.Y.)
    |August 31, 2007
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Current conservation efforts protect only 5% of global land, insufficient for biodiversity survival. Urgent policy changes are needed to prevent mass species extinction due to habitat loss.

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    Area of Science:

    • Conservation Science
    • Ecology
    • Biodiversity Studies

    Background:

    • Limited land area (≤5%) is designated for nature protection globally.
    • Tropical biodiversity survival is questionable outside protected reserves.
    • Existing conservation targets (e.g., 10% territory protection) are inadequate.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To evaluate the efficacy of current land protection policies in preserving global biodiversity.
    • To highlight the discrepancy between conservation goals and ecological requirements for species survival.

    Main Methods:

    • Analysis of global land area allocation for conservation.
    • Review of ecological data on habitat disruption and species loss.
    • Assessment of current international conservation policy recommendations.

    Main Results:

    • Current protected land (≤5%) is insufficient to safeguard global biodiversity.
    • Ecological consensus indicates 90% habitat disruption leads to 50% species loss.
    • Existing policies are insufficient to avert a biodiversity crisis.

    Conclusions:

    • Current conservation policies are failing to prevent mass biodiversity loss.
    • A significant increase in protected habitat is required to mitigate species extinction.
    • Urgent policy reform is necessary to address the escalating biodiversity crisis.