2016
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2016.00112
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Ethics of Conservation Triage

Abstract: Conservation triage seems to be at a stalemate between those who accept triage based on utilitarian rationalization, and those that reject it based on a number of ethical principles. We argue that without considered attention to the ethics of conservation triage we risk further polarization in the field of conservation. We draw lessons from the medical sector, where triage is more intuitive and acceptable, and also from disaster planning, to help navigate the challenges that triage entails for conservation sci… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…Other decision‐making methods are also available, such as the Investment Framework for Environmental Resources (http://www.inffer.org), the project prioritization protocol (Joseph, Maloney, & Possingham, ), or Bayesian logic (Stewart et al, ), but the NE concept may become another tool for conservation prioritization. The NE concept and triage are not universally adopted because these concepts can lead to the passive acceptance of the lack of resources assigned to conservation, which may foster negative conservation outcomes, such as species extinction (Jachowski & Kesler, ; Parr et al, ) and touches on values associated with conservation triage (Wilson & Law, ). In this sense, the well‐articulated and valid points against the NE concept by Murcia et al () and Aronson et al () mirror concerns expressed against triage in environmental management.…”
Section: Novel Marine Ecosystemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other decision‐making methods are also available, such as the Investment Framework for Environmental Resources (http://www.inffer.org), the project prioritization protocol (Joseph, Maloney, & Possingham, ), or Bayesian logic (Stewart et al, ), but the NE concept may become another tool for conservation prioritization. The NE concept and triage are not universally adopted because these concepts can lead to the passive acceptance of the lack of resources assigned to conservation, which may foster negative conservation outcomes, such as species extinction (Jachowski & Kesler, ; Parr et al, ) and touches on values associated with conservation triage (Wilson & Law, ). In this sense, the well‐articulated and valid points against the NE concept by Murcia et al () and Aronson et al () mirror concerns expressed against triage in environmental management.…”
Section: Novel Marine Ecosystemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, we urge careful consideration of the consequences of applying this framework at a global scale. Even though ‘conservation triage’ is increasingly promoted as a strategy for prioritizing limited resources to address increasing pressures on natural systems (Bottrill et al, ; Wilson & Law, ), global scale triage (Wilson et al, ) based solely on ecological features such as biodiversity (Roberts et al, ) and endemism (Hughes et al, ) has the pitfall of overlooking regions with social, economic, or cultural value. Given the importance of reefs for food security, it is neither practical nor ethical to ‘write off’ large regions of the world's reefs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The gap between resources available and resources needed for conservation is widening [90,91]. Consequently, investment prioritisation is necessary [92,93]. How this is done needs to be anchored in the problem framing and by clearly defined ecological, economic and social objectives.…”
Section: Challenge 3: Prioritisation and Tradeoffs-we Can't Save Evermentioning
confidence: 99%