Eleven of the world’s leading conservation organisations,
including BirdLife International and the RSPB, announced an ambitious
new partnership to identify, map, monitor and conserve the most
important places for life on earth.
No matter where we are from on this planet, we speak a common
language: the language of nature. From Pacific reefs to Siberian tundra,
nature is key to our lives, so it makes sense that this importance is
recognised equitably worldwide.
Now, the environmental community speaks one new common language:
KBAs, or Key Biodiversity Areas. This international language has more
than 18,000 words already - that’s the number of KBAs identified to
date. With more than US$15 million committed over the next five years,
the Key Biodiversity Area Partnership will bring to life a new ‘gold
standard’ for site conservation, with top conservation players working
together to globally consistent criteria recognised by international
conventions.
Through the KBA Partnership, resources and expertise will be
mobilised to further identify and map Key Biodiversity Areas worldwide.
Monitoring of these sites will enable detection of potential threats and
identification of appropriate conservation actions. The Partnership
will also advise national governments on expanding their protected areas
network, and will work with private companies to ensure they minimise
and mitigate their impact on nature.
The announcement was made at the IUCN World Conservation Congress
currently taking place in Hawai?i, USA, not far from the Molokai Island
marine area in Hawai?i – a KBA home to the Critically Endangered coral
Porites pukoensis, known only to occur in the shallow waters of this
site.
Those familiar to BirdLife’s work with Important Bird &
Biodiversity Areas (IBAs), will recognise the concept, as it originates
in our work to identify 13,000 of IBAs worldwide on land and sea over
the last four decades, through its 120 national Partners. The new KBA
Standard is intended to harmonise all such existing approaches under a
single conservation umbrella, which all environmental NGOs will hold and
point directly at governments. BirdLife will be managing the new World Database of Key Biodiversity AreasTM.
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