All Stories

  1. Inferring public interest from search engine data requires caution
  2. The Past, Present, and Future of Using Social Marketing to Conserve Biodiversity
  3. Characterizing efforts to reduce consumer demand for wildlife products
  4. The effect of knowledge, species aesthetic appeal, familiarity and conservation need on willingness to donate
  5. Qualitative impact evaluation of a social marketing campaign for conservation
  6. To What Extent Is Social Marketing Used in Demand Reduction Campaigns for Illegal Wildlife Products? Insights From Elephant Ivory and Rhino Horn
  7. Why do people donate to conservation? Insights from a ‘real world’ campaign
  8. Measuring the impact of an entertainment-education intervention to reduce demand for bushmeat
  9. Roadkill records of Lowland Tapir Tapirus terrestris (Mammalia: Perissodactyla: Tapiridae) between kilometers 06 and 76 of highway BR-163, state of Pará, Brazil
  10. Does It Work for Biodiversity? Experiences and Challenges in the Evaluation of Social Marketing Campaigns
  11. Investigating the impact of media on demand for wildlife: A case study of Harry Potter and the UK trade in owls
  12. The effectiveness of celebrities in conservation marketing
  13. Increased conservation marketing effort has major fundraising benefits for even the least popular species
  14. Record number of Yellow-billed Oxpeckers Buphagus africanus Linnaeus, 1766 (Aves: Passeriformes: Buphagidae) foraging on a single host
  15. Conservation social science: Understanding and integrating human dimensions to improve conservation
  16. Using social norm to promote energy conservation in a public building
  17. Understanding conservation marketing and focusing on the best available evidence: a reply to Hobson
  18. Mainstreaming the social sciences in conservation
  19. Ending the citation of retracted papers
  20. Understanding Urban Demand for Wild Meat in Vietnam: Implications for Conservation Actions
  21. Introducing conservation marketing: why should the devil have all the best tunes?
  22. Correction to Scientific Evidence Supports a Ban on Microbeads
  23. Conservation Needs Diverse Values, Approaches, and Practitioners
  24. Understanding stakeholder conflict between conservation and hunting in Malta
  25. Competitive outreach in the 21st century: Why we need conservation marketing
  26. Heterogeneity in consumer preferences for orchids in international trade and the potential for the use of market research methods to study demand for wildlife
  27. Scientific Evidence Supports a Ban on Microbeads
  28. Beyond compensation: Integrating local communities’ livelihood choices in large carnivore conservation
  29. Black Stork Down: Military Discourses in Bird Conservation in Malta
  30. Has Climate Change Taken Prominence over Biodiversity Conservation?
  31. Pest Control: Embrace Marketing
  32. The academic welfare state: making peer-review count
  33. Evaluating Conservation Flagships and Flagship Fleets
  34. Using a Systematic Approach to Select Flagship Species for Bird Conservation
  35. Beyond the “General Public”: Implications of Audience Characteristics for Promoting Species Conservation in the Western Ghats Hotspot, India
  36. Anthropomorphized species as tools for conservation: utility beyond prosocial, intelligent and suffering species
  37. On the distribution and ecology of Leposternon octostegum: Putting a subterranean reptile species on the map
  38. Revived species: how would they survive?
  39. Stakeholder Perceptions of Potential Flagship Species for the Sacred Groves of the North Western Ghats, India
  40. Jaguar Panthera onca predation of marine turtles: conflict between flagship species in Tortuguero, Costa Rica
  41. Identifying Cinderella species: uncovering mammals with conservation flagship appeal
  42. Whaling: Quota trading won't work
  43. Selecting marine invertebrate flagship species: Widening the net
  44. Marketing diversity: a response to Joseph and colleagues
  45. Toward a systematic approach for identifying conservation flagships
  46. Let the locals lead
  47. Birds as tourism flagship species: a case study of tropical islands