20 08, 2019

Check, clean, dry: how can canoers help control the spread of invasive species?

By |2020-01-16T20:51:26+00:00August 20th, 2019|Freshwater biodiversity, People & nature, Uncategorized|Comments Off on Check, clean, dry: how can canoers help control the spread of invasive species?

This article was first published on the Freshwater Blog on August 16 2019 On a hot Saturday in June I rolled up at the UK’s National Water Sport Centre. The place was abuzz with cars, kayaks, club flags and paddle-carrying athletes chatting bucket starts, heats, duck tape and Nelos. Everyone was readying to race on a

14 01, 2019

Community-based conservation of arapaima and giant turtles in the Amazon Basin

By |2019-07-23T07:53:13+00:00January 14th, 2019|Blog, Freshwater biodiversity, People & nature|Comments Off on Community-based conservation of arapaima and giant turtles in the Amazon Basin

Originally published on the Freshwater Blog on 14 January 2019 The arapaima, a fish native to the Amazon Basin which can grow to over three metres in length. Image: Lynn Chan | Flickr Creative Commons Arapaima are one of the world’s most unique freshwater animals. A true ‘megafauna‘ species, these huge fish (which can grow to

15 07, 2016

When is river restoration rewilding?

By |2016-07-15T10:05:56+00:00July 15th, 2016|21st Century conservation, Blog, Freshwater biodiversity, Rewilding|Comments Off on When is river restoration rewilding?

Originally published on the Freshwaterblog on 24 June 2016 Back in May I presented a policy brief authored by Frans Schepers of Rewiding Europe and myself to aRewilding Dorset meeting organised by Adrian Newton and Arjan Gosal of the University of Bournemouth. The county of Dorset is located on the South coast of Britain and

30 05, 2014

Maps in Action: Key Freshwater Biodiversity Areas and protected area network planning

By |2016-05-03T01:23:26+00:00May 30th, 2014|Blog, Freshwater biodiversity, Protected Areas|Comments Off on Maps in Action: Key Freshwater Biodiversity Areas and protected area network planning

Originally posted to the FreshwaterBlog on 30 May 2014 The designation and management of protected areas has been a cornerstone of biodiversity policy for more than a century. In the 1970s, for example, the international community agreed to expand the global protected reserve area system guided by the representation principle – the idea that populations

21 05, 2013

The Big Challenges for Freshwater Biodiversity Conservation

By |2016-05-03T01:23:26+00:00May 21st, 2013|Blog, Freshwater biodiversity, Science Communication|Comments Off on The Big Challenges for Freshwater Biodiversity Conservation

Originally posted on the FreshwaterBlog on 21 & 22 May 2013 With World Biodiversity Day just one sleep away, Will Darwall, Head of the IUCN Freshwater Biodiversity Unit, sat down with Paul Jepson from the University of Oxford to discuss some of the big challenges facing freshwater biodiversity. The theme of the International Day of Biodiversity 2013

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