All Stories

  1. Integración del cambio de comportamiento en la conservación de la biodiversidad: Necesidades, barreras y caminos a seguir
  2. Integração da mudança de comportamento na conservação da biodiversidade: Necessidades, barreiras e caminhos a seguir
  3. Automating the analysis of public saliency and attitudes toward biodiversity from digital media
  4. Structured Counterfactual Selection in Conservation Impact Evaluations
  5. Environmental crimes are overlooked in global enforcement: an analysis of Interpol Red Notices
  6. Mainstreaming behaviour change in biodiversity conservation—a new Global Needs Assessment Report
  7. Measuring impact of digital conservation campaigns using culturomics
  8. Languages of Life: A Global Perspective on Linguistic Priorities for Biodiversity Conservation
  9. Designing and evaluating an intervention to reduce demand for bear bile in Cambodia
  10. Banning Wildlife Trade Can Boost the Unregulated Trade of Threatened Species
  11. Mainstreaming behaviour change in biodiversity conservation - Needs, barriers and ways forward
  12. Applying segmentation to inform demand reduction interventions for pangolins in Guangdong Province, China
  13. Using digital mobile games to increase the support for nature conservation
  14. Assessing the risk of overexploitation to a tarantula species in the pet trade
  15. Understanding author choices in the current conservation publishing landscape
  16. Testing an intervention codesigned with stakeholders for altering wildlife consumption: Health messaging matters
  17. Designing celebrity‐endorsed behavioral interventions in conservation
  18. The Elephant Queen: Can a nature documentary help to increase tolerance towards elephants?
  19. Using photo editing to understand the impact of species aesthetics on support for conservation
  20. Understanding consumers to inform market interventions for Singapore's shark fin trade
  21. Impact on species' online attention when named after celebrities
  22. Measuring the effectiveness of value-framing and message valence on audience engagement across countries
  23. Using SMS surveys to understand songbird ownership and shark product consumption in Indonesia
  24. Adopt digital tools to monitor social dimensions of the global biodiversity framework
  25. Flagship individuals in biodiversity conservation
  26. IUCN launches Behaviour Change Task Force
  27. Understanding Author Choices in the Current Conservation Publishing Landscape
  28. A big and hairy business: Investigating the interplay of species traits and trade dynamics in the tarantula pet market
  29. The manifold costs of being a non-native English speaker in science
  30. Applying a co‐design approach with key stakeholders to design interventions to reduce illegal wildlife consumption
  31. Understanding consumers to inform market interventions for Singapore’s shark fin trade
  32. Transience of public attention in conservation science
  33. Evaluating global interest in biodiversity and conservation
  34. Understanding the Market Drivers Behind the Reduced Demand for Ivory Products in Japan
  35. Conservation fundraising: Evidence from social media and traditional mail field experiments
  36. Systematic review of conservation interventions to promote voluntary behavior change
  37. Applying a co-design approach with key stakeholders to design interventions to reduce illegal wildlife consumption
  38. Understanding the drivers of expert opinion when classifying species as extinct
  39. Challenges to academic-practitioner knowledge exchange on illegal wildlife trade
  40. Testing the influence of visual framing on engagement and pro‐environmental action
  41. Measuring the effectiveness of valence and motivation message frames on audience engagement
  42. Cross‐cultural mobile game evaluation shows improvement in environmental learning, but not behavior
  43. Banning wildlife trade can boost demand for unregulated threatened species
  44. Societal extinction of species
  45. Evaluating the reliability of media reports for gathering information about illegal wildlife trade seizures
  46. Evaluating global interest in biodiversity and conservation
  47. Cross-cultural mobile game evaluation shows improvement in environmental learning, but not behaviour
  48. Emerging contradictions in the enforcement of bird hunting regulations in Malta
  49. Reducing demand for overexploited wildlife products: Lessons from systematic reviews from outside conservation science
  50. Do Species Receive More Attention When Named After Celebrities?
  51. The effectiveness and efficiency of using normative messages to reduce waste: A real world experiment
  52. Understanding the market drivers behind the reduced demand for ivory products in Japan
  53. The implications of digital visual media for human–nature relationships
  54. How Will the End of Bear Bile Farming in Vietnam Influence Consumer Choice?
  55. Stepping into the Wildeverse: Evaluating the impact of augmented reality mobile gaming on pro‐conservation behaviours
  56. Product attributes affecting the substitutability of saiga horn drinks among young adult consumers in Singapore
  57. Evidence for effective conservation fundraising: Comparing social media with traditional mailshot field experiments
  58. Leveraging shark‐fin consumer preferences to deliver sustainable fisheries
  59. Measuring Global Awareness of Nature
  60. Making more effective use of human behavioural science in conservation interventions
  61. Evidence-Based Behaviour Change Intervention on Saiga Horn Medicine in Singapore: Research Brief
  62. Testing branding techniques on species common names to improve their fundraising profile for conservation
  63. Post COVID‐19 : a solution scan of options for preventing future zoonotic epidemics
  64. Nature documentaries as catalysts for change: Mapping out the ‘Blackfish Effect’
  65. Picturing donations: Do images influence conservation fundraising?
  66. How will the end of bear bile farming in Vietnam influence consumer choice?
  67. Biodiversity conservation as a promising frontier for behavioural science
  68. Trends in Digital Marketing for Biodiversity Conservation
  69. Specialized questioning techniques and their use in conservation: A review of available tools, with a focus on methodological advances
  70. Who eats wild meat? Profiling consumers in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
  71. Uncovering prevalence of pangolin consumption using a technique for investigating sensitive behaviour
  72. Trends in ecology and conservation over eight decades
  73. Evaluating a large-scale online behaviour change intervention aimed at wildlife product consumers in Singapore
  74. What determines the success and failure of environmental crowdfunding?
  75. Digital data sources and methods for conservation culturomics
  76. Invasion Culturomics and iEcology
  77. Investigating the international and pan‐African trade in giraffe parts and derivatives
  78. Using theory and evidence to design behaviour change interventions for reducing unsustainable wildlife consumption
  79. Influencing consumer demand is vital for tackling the illegal wildlife trade
  80. A systematic review of conservation efforts using non-monetary, non-regulatory incentives to promote voluntary behaviour change
  81. Challenges in the impact evaluation of behaviour change interventions: The case of sea turtle meat and eggs in São Tomé
  82. Insights for reducing the consumption of wildlife: The use of bear bile and gallbladder in Cambodia
  83. Taking the Pulse of Social Marketing: The 2019 World Social Marketing Conference
  84. Co‐designing behavior change interventions to conserve biodiversity
  85. Preferences for different flagship types in fundraising for nature conservation
  86. A fine balance: specialized questioning techniques and their use in conservation
  87. Evaluating the impact of a mobile conservation game on players' support for nature conservation
  88. Insights for reducing the consumption of wildlife: the use of bear bile and gallbladder in Cambodia
  89. Understanding the public debate about trophy hunting in China as a rural development mechanism
  90. Strategic advertising of online news articles as an intervention to influence wildlife product consumers
  91. Evaluating the impact of the documentary series Blue Planet II on viewers' plastic consumption behaviors
  92. Motivations for the use and consumption of wildlife products
  93. A scoping review of celebrity endorsement in environmental campaigns and evidence for its effectiveness
  94. Reducing Demand for Overexploited Wildlife Products: Lessons from Systematic Reviews from Outside Conservation Science
  95. Taking a more nuanced look at behavior change for demand reduction in the illegal wildlife trade
  96. Emerging illegal wildlife trade issues: A global horizon scan
  97. Catalyzing sustainable fisheries management through behavior change interventions
  98. Ethical considerations when conservation research involves people
  99. The role of species charisma in biological invasions
  100. From call to action: a roadmap to sustainable conferences
  101. Audience research as a cornerstone of demand management interventions for illegal wildlife products: Demarketing sea turtle meat and eggs
  102. Ethical Publishing in Biodiversity Conservation Science
  103. Online Monitoring of Global Attitudes Towards Wildlife
  104. Correction: Saiga horn user characteristics, motivations, and purchasing behaviour in Singapore
  105. A scoping review into the impact of animal imagery on pro-environmental outcomes
  106. Illegal Wildlife Trade: Scale, Processes, and Governance
  107. Sentiment analysis as a measure of conservation culture in scientific literature
  108. Evaluating the application of scale frequency to estimate the size of pangolin scale seizures
  109. Nature documentaries and saving nature: Reflections on the new Netflix series Our Planet
  110. Saiga horn user characteristics, motivations, and purchasing behaviour in Singapore
  111. Did the movie Finding Dory increase demand for blue tang fish?
  112. Inferring public interest from search engine data requires caution
  113. The Past, Present, and Future of Using Social Marketing to Conserve Biodiversity
  114. Characterizing efforts to reduce consumer demand for wildlife products
  115. The effect of knowledge, species aesthetic appeal, familiarity and conservation need on willingness to donate
  116. Qualitative impact evaluation of a social marketing campaign for conservation
  117. To What Extent Is Social Marketing Used in Demand Reduction Campaigns for Illegal Wildlife Products? Insights From Elephant Ivory and Rhino Horn
  118. Evidence to Action: Research to Address Illegal Wildlife Trade
  119. Why do people donate to conservation? Insights from a ‘real world’ campaign
  120. Measuring the impact of an entertainment-education intervention to reduce demand for bushmeat
  121. Roadkill records of Lowland Tapir Tapirus terrestris (Mammalia: Perissodactyla: Tapiridae) between kilometers 06 and 76 of highway BR-163, state of Pará, Brazil
  122. Does It Work for Biodiversity? Experiences and Challenges in the Evaluation of Social Marketing Campaigns
  123. Investigating the impact of media on demand for wildlife: A case study of Harry Potter and the UK trade in owls
  124. The effectiveness of celebrities in conservation marketing
  125. Increased conservation marketing effort has major fundraising benefits for even the least popular species
  126. Record number of Yellow-billed Oxpeckers Buphagus africanus Linnaeus, 1766 (Aves: Passeriformes: Buphagidae) foraging on a single host
  127. Conservation social science: Understanding and integrating human dimensions to improve conservation
  128. Using social norm to promote energy conservation in a public building
  129. Understanding conservation marketing and focusing on the best available evidence: a reply to Hobson
  130. Mainstreaming the social sciences in conservation
  131. Ending the citation of retracted papers
  132. Understanding Urban Demand for Wild Meat in Vietnam: Implications for Conservation Actions
  133. Introducing conservation marketing: why should the devil have all the best tunes?
  134. Correction to Scientific Evidence Supports a Ban on Microbeads
  135. Conservation Needs Diverse Values, Approaches, and Practitioners
  136. Understanding stakeholder conflict between conservation and hunting in Malta
  137. Competitive outreach in the 21st century: Why we need conservation marketing
  138. Heterogeneity in consumer preferences for orchids in international trade and the potential for the use of market research methods to study demand for wildlife
  139. Scientific Evidence Supports a Ban on Microbeads
  140. Beyond compensation: Integrating local communities’ livelihood choices in large carnivore conservation
  141. Black Stork Down: Military Discourses in Bird Conservation in Malta
  142. Has Climate Change Taken Prominence over Biodiversity Conservation?
  143. An economic analysis of species conservation and translocation for island communities: the Seychelles paradise flycatchers as a case study
  144. Pest Control: Embrace Marketing
  145. The academic welfare state: making peer-review count
  146. Evaluating Conservation Flagships and Flagship Fleets
  147. Using a Systematic Approach to Select Flagship Species for Bird Conservation
  148. Beyond the “General Public”: Implications of Audience Characteristics for Promoting Species Conservation in the Western Ghats Hotspot, India
  149. Anthropomorphized species as tools for conservation: utility beyond prosocial, intelligent and suffering species
  150. On the distribution and ecology of Leposternon octostegum: Putting a subterranean reptile species on the map
  151. Revived species: how would they survive?
  152. Stakeholder Perceptions of Potential Flagship Species for the Sacred Groves of the North Western Ghats, India
  153. Jaguar Panthera onca predation of marine turtles: conflict between flagship species in Tortuguero, Costa Rica
  154. Identifying Cinderella species: uncovering mammals with conservation flagship appeal
  155. Whaling: Quota trading won't work
  156. Selecting marine invertebrate flagship species: Widening the net
  157. Marketing diversity: a response to Joseph and colleagues
  158. Toward a systematic approach for identifying conservation flagships
  159. Let the locals lead
  160. Birds as tourism flagship species: a case study of tropical islands