Defining conservation priorities in tropical and biodiversity rich countries

 TapirBabypr
23 Nov 2016 16:50:40.233

PA 24/16

Rich in biodiversity, with a rapidly growing economy, Malaysia exemplifies the tension between conservation and economic development faced by many tropical countries.

While recent initiatives have attempted to address conservation priorities at global and national scales, most of these focus on developed countries in temperate regions. There is a need, say experts at The University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus (UNMC), to develop similar strategies in developing countries, especially in biodiversity hotspot areas.

K. Nagulendran (Nagu), a third year PhD student with the School of Geographical and Environmental Sciences, led a multi-stakeholder exercise involving several hundred participants to identify conservation priorities in Peninsular Malaysia. They have produced a list of 35 ranked conservation issues within seven general themes. The aim is to influence policy-makers, practitioners and researchers and ensure conservation becomes an integral part of the development process. The results – ‘A multi-stakeholder strategy to identify conservation priorities in Peninsular Malaysia’ - have been published in the open access academic journal Cogent Environmental Science.

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More information is available from Dr Ahimsa Campus-Arceiz in the School of Geographical and Environmental Sciences at The University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus, on +6 (03) 8924 8734 ahimsa.camposarceiz@nottingham.edu.my
Lindsay Brooke

Lindsay Brooke - Media Relations Manager

Email: lindsay.brooke@nottingham.ac.uk Phone: +44 (0)115 951 5751 Location: University Park

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