2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2016.03.024
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Weak agreement between the species conservation status assessments of the European Habitats Directive and Red Lists

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Cited by 19 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…Indeed, the approaches currently employed by EU member states to operationalize FCS are widely disparate (McConville and Tucker 2015). In addition, a recent study reported a worryingly poor correlation for many species between their red list status and their conservation status as reported by EU member states under the Habitats Directive (Moser et al 2016). Because these controversies can have legal consequences for member states, they contribute to many of the conflicts surrounding biodiversity conservation in general (Hiedanpää and Bromley 2011;Redpath et al 2013;Epstein 2016).…”
Section: Context: Confusion Concerning Fcs Concept Impairs Effectivenmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, the approaches currently employed by EU member states to operationalize FCS are widely disparate (McConville and Tucker 2015). In addition, a recent study reported a worryingly poor correlation for many species between their red list status and their conservation status as reported by EU member states under the Habitats Directive (Moser et al 2016). Because these controversies can have legal consequences for member states, they contribute to many of the conflicts surrounding biodiversity conservation in general (Hiedanpää and Bromley 2011;Redpath et al 2013;Epstein 2016).…”
Section: Context: Confusion Concerning Fcs Concept Impairs Effectivenmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Article 17 and Red Lists aim to assess the status of a species using quantitative indicators such as size and trends in the area of occurrence, population size and trends (Moser et al 2016); nonetheless, they adopt similar but different criteria. There is not a one to one relationship between a IUCN and the CS categories.…”
Section: Relationship Between Conservation Status (Cs) and Iucn Risk mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The main difference between the two assessment of species' conservation status (IUCN and HD protocols), is that the former measures the distance of a species from the risk of extinction, while the latter measures the distance from a ''Favourable Conservation Status''. However, these two different, but generally comparable, schemes provide an opportunity for a comparison to explore potential uncertainties involved in such assessments (Moser et al 2016) and/or between scientists' Red Lists, and nature protection legislation enacted by governments (Mendoza-Fernández and Mota 2016); this issue deserve a relevant interests because setting conservation actions largely depends on the agreement among experts on the conservation status of species (Moser et al 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is an arbitrarily-chosen scoring system (c.f. Moser et al 2016) designed to promote clarity where there is a difference in threat assessment rank; we do not intend to symbolize that CR (3) is somehow twice as imperiled as NT (6), or that the difference between NT and VU is the same as the difference between EW and EX-these numbers are indications of relative rank only and the difference of 1 unit between them is purely to provide interpretive clarity. Our 'Difference in Assessment' for a species between IUCN-RL and RRL is the numerical score for the IUCN-RL assessment minus the numerical score for the RRL assessment.…”
Section: Ranked-comparisons Between Assessmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…RRL can commonly use the same or similar criteria as the IUCN-RL to assess extinction risk, but exact processes can vary and may not be consistent between different regions. Given their prevalence and importance for conservation, a number of studies have sought to compare RRL with IUCN-RL assessments in order to integrate RRL data into the global IUCN-RL (Rodriguez 2008;Moser et al 2016), or to apply IUCN-RL assessments and criteria at regional levels (Gärdenfors et al 2001). Typically, comparisons between RRL and IUCN-RL assessments will find differences in total number of evaluated taxa (Rodriguez 2008;Brito et al 2010), in the geographic distribution of assessments (Brito et al 2010;Zamin et al 2010), in taxonomic sampling (Rodriguez 2008;Zamin et al 2010), and in the level of threat status assigned to the same species (Brito et al 2010;Morais et al 2012;Harris et al 2012;Helfman 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%