Quantification of Extinction Risk: IUCN's System for Classifying Threatened Species
Imperial College London · BirdLife international · +6 more institutions
Abstract
The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species was increasingly used during the 1980s to assess the conservation status of species for policy and planning purposes. This use stimulated the development of a new set of quantitative criteria for listing species in the categories of threat: critically endangered, endangered, and vulnerable. These criteria, which were intended to be applicable to all species except microorganisms, were part of a broader system for classifying threatened species and were fully implemented by IUCN in 2000. The system and the criteria have been widely used by conservation practitioners and scientists and now underpin one indicator being used…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 45.68
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 125
Authors
8Topics & keywords
- IUCN Red List
- Threatened species
- Conservation-dependent species
- Convention on Biological Diversity
- Critically endangered
- Endangered species
- Extinction (optical mineralogy)
- Near-threatened species
- Life in Land