All Stories

  1. Raising practitioner awareness to improve conservation of Data Deficient species: Evidence from before-and-after interviews
  2. Emerging threats to Antarctic conservation
  3. A Synthesis of Threats Impacting Australian Threatened Ecological Communities
  4. A noodle in a haystack: determining the conservation status of the rare and Data Deficient Ravensthorpe Range slider, Lerista viduata
  5. Synergies of management actions between species and community focused approaches to protecting threatened biodiversity
  6. Species and ecological communities as management surrogates for threatened biodiversity
  7. The value of capturing diverse perspectives when setting decision triggers for threatened species management
  8. Establishing effective conservation management strategies for a poorly known endangered species: a case study using Australia’s Night Parrot (Pezoporus occidentalis)
  9. Effectiveness of conservation interventions for Australian woodland birds: A systematic review
  10. Environmental evidence in action: on the science and practice of evidence synthesis and evidence-based decision-making
  11. How expert insight into alpine peatland conservation complements global scientific evidence
  12. The role of non-English-language science in informing national biodiversity assessments
  13. Setting research priorities for effective management of a threatened ecosystem: Australian alpine and subalpine peatland
  14. Lessons from other disciplines for setting management thresholds for biodiversity conservation
  15. Use of citizen science datasets to test effects of grazing exclusion and replanting on Australian woodland birds
  16. Effectiveness of conservation interventions globally for degraded peatlands in cool-climate regions
  17. Training future generations to deliver evidence‐based conservation and ecosystem management
  18. Relationships between Pacific salmon and aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems: implications for ecosystem‐based management
  19. Prioritizing conservation actions for Pacific salmon in Canada
  20. The use of evidence in decision-making by practitioners
  21. Blood from a stone: Performance of catch-only methods in estimating stock biomass status
  22. Prioritizing conservation actions for Pacific salmon in Canada
  23. Vulnerable species and ecosystems are falling through the cracks of environmental impact assessments
  24. A typology of barriers and enablers of scientific evidence use in conservation practice
  25. The effectiveness of spawning habitat creation or enhancement for substrate-spawning temperate fish: a systematic review
  26. Working constructively toward an improved North American approach to wildlife management
  27. Standardized reporting of the costs of management interventions for biodiversity conservation
  28. Trade-offs for data-limited fisheries when using harvest strategies based on catch-only models
  29. Hallmarks of science missing from North American wildlife management
  30. Applying a New Ensemble Approach to Estimating Stock Status of Marine Fisheries around the World
  31. Improving estimates of population status and trend with superensemble models
  32. Scientific Evidence and Potential Barriers in the Management of Brazilian Protected Areas
  33. An evidence assessment tool for ecosystem services and conservation studies
  34. Organising evidence for environmental management decisions: a ‘4S’ hierarchy
  35. An evidence assessment tool for ecosystem services and conservation studies
  36. A roadmap for Antarctic and Southern Ocean science for the next two decades and beyond
  37. The effect of scientific evidence on conservation practitioners’ management decisions
  38. Trends and biases in the listing and recovery planning for threatened species: an Australian case study
  39. Integrating research, monitoring and management into an adaptive management framework to achieve effective conservation outcomes
  40. Unexpected outcomes of invasive predator control: the importance of evaluating conservation management actions
  41. Exotic species richness and native species endemism increase the impact of exotic species on islands
  42. Does recovery planning improve the status of threatened species?