natrevbiodiv.bsky.social
A new journal from the Nature Portfolio reviewing key advances in conservation, ecology, and evolution. Posts by the editors, @alexmckay.bsky.social, @lukegrinham.bsky.social, and Tim Thomas. https://www.nature.com/nrbd
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And finally, for our first set of Journal Clubs, Wohlleben on a paper by Decaestecker et al: go.nature.com/4b2uI4E
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Liang (@guopeng-liang.bsky.social) on a paper by Chen et al: go.nature.com/4b38kbj
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Krasnow (@rubyk.bsky.social) on a paper by Holmes et al: go.nature.com/3EHIbD3
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Hechler (@roberthechler.bsky.social) on a paper by Masayuki Ushio: go.nature.com/41543Ql
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Finally, in their Comment, Rakotonarivo et al. stress that protected areas must provide positive social outcomes for local people – particularly in light of the Global Biodiversity Framework’s 30×30 targets. go.nature.com/41cq1SD
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This Perspective from Belitz (@mikesmothmodels.bsky.social), Zipkin, et al calls for conservation at the scale of ecological communities and discusses modeling advances that enable progress at this scale. go.nature.com/40F5MNa
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Next up, this Review from Hays et al. takes stock of global sea turtle populations, summarizing the dominant threats and most effective conservation interventions. go.nature.com/40QgzE9
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This Review from Haase et al. summarises the biodiversity outcomes of river conservation actions worldwide, identifies reasons for their success and failure, and presents future approaches to improve conservation. go.nature.com/4h4oKm1
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Glad you're enjoying some of the first papers!
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Lead author: @mikesmothmodels.bsky.social
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A Review from Haase et al summarizes freshwater conservation efficacy. Freshwater conservation appears to have lower frequency of positive outcomes compared to marine and terrestrial conservation. The authors offer insights for improvement in the future! go.nature.com/4h4oKm1
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A Perspective from Belitz et al. suggests that focusing conservation and management actions at the assemblage level has multiple benefits relatively to purely species-focused or ecosystem-focused actions. go.nature.com/40F5MNa
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A big idea that I am really excited about is that we should think about biodiversity monitoring (as the #CBD does) is a powerful tool for biosurveillance. By doing a better job at understanding where reservoirs are, we can leverage decades of biodiversity data for health.