Authors
John Craig, Sandra Anderson, Mick Clout, Bob Creese, Neil Mitchell, John Ogden, Mere Roberts, Graham Ussher
Publication date
2000/11
Source
Annual Review of ecology and Systematics
Volume
31
Issue
1
Pages
61-78
Publisher
Annual Reviews
Description
Abstract
Conservation in New Zealand is failing to halt an ongoing decline in biodiversity. Classical problems of ecosystem loss and fragmentation have largely been countered in some regions by reservation of 30% of total land area. Unsustainable harvesting of native biodiversity has stopped; indeed harvesting of terrestrial species is rare. In contrast, marine reserves do not cover even 1% of the managed area, and harvest of native species, some of it unsustainable, are a major industry. Introduced pests, especially mammals, are the overwhelming conservation problem. Legislation, management, and considerable public opinion is based on preservationist ideals that demand the sanctity of native land biodiversity. Considerable success in threatened species management, island eradications, and mainland control of pests is increasing opportunities for restoration. New legislation is increasingly built on concepts …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J Craig, S Anderson, M Clout, B Creese, N Mitchell… - Annual Review of ecology and Systematics, 2000