Journal article
Improving policy efficiency and effectiveness to save more species: A case study of the megadiverse country Australia
JA McDonald, J Carwardine, LN Joseph, CJ Klein, TM Rout, JEM Watson, ST Garnett, MA McCarthy, HP Possingham
Biological Conservation | Published : 2015
Abstract
Native flora and fauna species continue to decline in the megadiverse, wealthy, economically and politically stable nation of Australia despite current efforts in policy and management. Ongoing research is examining these declines, their causes and the adequacy of current policy, but strategies for improving the outcomes for threatened species have attracted less attention. We discuss several key aspects of Australia's national threatened species management approach that potentially hinder the efficiency and effectiveness of management: the threatened species listing process is lengthy and biased; recovery plan development is resource intensive, restricted to a subset of species and often no..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council Postdoctoral Fellowship
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was conducted with funding support from the Australian Government's National Environmental Research Program and the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions. J.A. McDonald is supported by the National Environmental Research Program. C.J. Klein is supported by an Australian Research Council Postdoctoral Fellowship (Project number DP110102153). R. Maloney also provided valuable assistance. We are grateful to A. Sheppard, F. Brown, M. Lonsdale and A. Whitten for providing comments and. suggestions.