4.6 Article

Assessment of the Conservation Efforts to Prevent Extinction of the Iberian Lynx

Journal

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages 4-8

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2010.01607.x

Keywords

evidence-based conservation; extinction probability; Iberian lynx; Lynx pardinus; management practice

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The Iberian lynx (Lynx pardinus) may be the first charismatic felid to become extinct in a high-income country, despite decades of study and much data that show extinction is highly probable. The International Union for Conservation of Nature categorizes it as critically endangered; about 200 free-ranging individuals remain in two populations in southern Spain. Conservation measures aimed at averting extirpation have been extensively undertaken with 4 of the former 10 Iberian lynx populations recorded 25 years ago. Two of the four populations have been extirpated. The number of individuals in the third population have declined by 83%, and in the fourth the probability of extirpation has increased from 34% to 95%. Major drivers of the pending extinction are the small areas to which conservation measures have been applied; lack of incorporation of evidence-based conservation, scientific monitoring, and adaptive management into conservation efforts; a lack of continuity in recovery efforts, and distrust by conservation agencies of scientific information. In contrast to situations in which conservation and economic objectives conflict, in the case of the Iberian lynx all stakeholders desire the species to be conserved.

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