IUCN Green Status of Species

IUCN Green Status of Species : a global standard for measuring species recovery and assessing conservation impact

The decline of many species towards extinction has largely focused conservation efforts on ensuring that species remain extant. However, conservationists have long recognised the need to complement this by aiming to recover depleted populations throughout a species’ range and to restore species to ecosystems from which they have been extirpated. The five main objectives of the IUCN Green Status of Species are:

  1. To provide a standardised framework for measuring species recovery;
  2. To recognise conservation achievements;
  3. To highlight species whose current conservation status is dependent on continued conservation actions;
  4. To forecast the expected conservation impact of planned conservation action;
  5. To elevate levels of ambition for long-term species recovery.

These objectives together encourage conservation towards species recovery, throughout a species’ range.

 

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Two new experts join the review of species
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Adenocarpus faurei, the first woody species in North Africa becomes extinct

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New taxonomic revisions and addictions on the web.
Two very interesting publications to know and conserve the native flora in Morocco and Egypt
Presentation of the web and more descriptions of species
Adenocarpus faurei, the first woody species in North Africa becomes extinct
Two new experts join the review of species
Thanks to the botanical magazine Al Yasmina, the contents of the “Flore de l’Afrique du Nord” by René Maire are now easily accessible.
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