Journal article

Ramsar Wetlands of International Importance–Improving Conservation Outcomes

RT Kingsford, G Bino, CM Finlayson, D Falster, JA Fitzsimons, DE Gawlik, NJ Murray, P Grillas, RC Gardner, TJ Regan, DJ Roux, RF Thomas

Frontiers in Environmental Science | FRONTIERS MEDIA SA | Published : 2021

Open access

Abstract

The Ramsar Convention (or the Convention on Wetlands), signed in 1971, was one of the first international conservation agreements, promoting global wise use of wetlands. It has three primary objectives: national designation and management of wetlands of international importance; general wise use of wetlands; and international cooperation. We examined lessons learnt for improving wetland conservation after Ramsar’s nearly five decades of operation. The number of wetlands in the Ramsar Site Network has grown over time (2,391 Ramsar Sites, 2.5 million km2, as at 2020-06-09) but unevenly around the world, with decreasing rate of growth in recent decades. Ramsar Sites are concentrated in countrie..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Nature Conservancy


Funding Acknowledgements

The Australian Research Council Linkage Grant (LP180100159), identifying a standard for reporting on ecological character of Ramsar Sites, and the Australian Research Council Australian Discovery Early Career Award (DE190100101, NM) supported us.