October 2021 Issue 155

Page 76

come from a communications team or a public engagement think tank as one might imagine; rather, it was developed by people working worldwide to halt extinction and advance recovery. The International Union for Conservation of Nature — which assesses global species’ status using a “red list” to differentiate between levels of imperilment — introduced the concept of a “green list” to assess levels of recovery feasibility and conservation success.

100 WOMEN WHO CARE 100 Women is an International Organisation. The first Cowichan branch started in 2016 and supports local accredited charities. Since that time a second women’s group (100 Warmland Women) and a men’s group have been started in the area. Since 2016 we have supported 16 local charities and raised $250,000. The success of the venture depends on the members to follow through on their commitment to support the chosen Charity with a $100 donation. A tax receipt is then issued. There are normally four meetings a year. The members can nominate any local accredited charity and from that 3 charities are drawn for the membership to vote on. At our most recent meetings ‘The Green Community’ and Providence Farm were successful. The windfall is approximately $10,000 depending on current membership. It is a simple and effective way of supporting our community. We welcome new members and the participation of all members to get involved in the Nomination process. For more information go to our website at 100WomenCowichan. Wordpress.com

GREENING THE RED LIST CAN ACCELERATE SPECIES RECOVERY

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nvironmentalists working to promote recovery of plants and animals at risk of extinction often face the challenge of how to best motivate the public. Should we describe the alarming decline of a beloved creature to spur action, or communicate a rare but inspiring success story to instil hope? How best to frame efforts to recover species on the brink is not limited to how we communicate with others; it’s also relevant to how we approach our work. Efforts to reverse the trends that threaten wildlife survival can be hard to sustain. It’s sometimes tremendously difficult to remain energized and positive in the face of ongoing, demoralizing species declines. Happily, a glass-half-full approach to framing species at risk recovery has emerged. It didn’t

“Warnings of imminent extinctions are not the only way to catalyse conservation efforts,” the IUCN states. “We also need an optimistic vision of species conservation that presents a road map on how to conserve a species and achieve its recovery. This is necessary to incentivize positive conservation actions and programmes. To achieve this, the Red List assessment process needs to be expanded to include classifiers of conservation success. IUCN is currently in the process of creating a new set of metrics to do just that.” This framing gives conservation practitioners a far broader — often more encouraging — picture than species’ status assessments alone. As the online magazine Yale Environment 360 describes, “While the Sumatran rhino’s low numbers may well keep it in the Critically Endangered category for decades to come, its Green Status assessment puts its longterm recovery potential near 50 percent, meaning that continued conservation efforts over the next century could take the species nearly halfway to full recovery ... For a species that has long been considered little more robust than a museum display, that’s a radical shift in its narrative — one that may well lead to new commitments of money and effort.” The emergent framework can also play a vital role in changing status quo practices. The popular Canadian approach to government-led recovery initiatives is “priority threat management.” It’s detailed in the study “Prioritizing Recovery Funding to Maximize Conservation of Endangered Species,” which focuses on an area

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of southern Saskatchewan and uses a template for evaluating recovery options for at-risk species based on, among other factors, the perceived cost-effectiveness of recovery measures. As the report notes, “We show here, that we can make limited resources for endangered species go much further by prioritizing investment in management strategies that recover the greatest number of species for the least cost.” This approach may sound sensible, but the David Suzuki Foundation has expressed concerns about cost-effectiveness becoming the dominant filter under such frameworks, as it could rule out much-needed conservation approaches and result in abandonment of some species. For example, the Saskatchewan report notes that habitat restoration was one of the “least cost-effective individual strategies” in its study area. Habitat restoration can be a costly undertaking. Yet in many, if not most, cases of species imperilment in Canada, the primary drivers have been industrial and development activities that, while fragmenting and degrading habitat, generated significant economic gains. They thus bear a responsibility to shoulder the costs. Recovering species at risk is a difficult journey. The first step is stopping the primary threats — stilling the knife, so to speak. But from there the undertaking becomes more hopeful, grounded in the belief that humans have the imagination and commitment to repair what we’ve damaged. As the authors of the Journal of Conservation Biology article on which the green list is premised write, “We believe development and implementation of this system will lend to The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species a positive vision for conservation, encouraging optimism.” “Optimism” isn’t a word you find in scientific journal articles about vulnerable species every day. Here’s to more. Learn more at www.davidsuzuki.org.


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Articles inside

October Forecasts

6min
page 77

Greening the Red List Can Accelerate Species Recovery

4min
page 76

Listening. The Heart of Healing

2min
page 73

Golden Ghost Tattoo Removal

2min
pages 74-75

IOPA - Connecting Organic Farming To Community

2min
page 72

The Importance of Eelgrass

2min
page 71

Riding the Waves of Emotions

4min
page 69

The Colours of Autumn Strolls

2min
page 68

Gratitude

2min
page 61

Why We Should Read: A Mind Spread Out on the Ground

2min
page 67

Cabaret Weekend Features Two Favourite Pianists

1min
page 62

Progressive Green Building Technologies

5min
pages 58-59

Art Show at Little Bird

2min
page 65

Strategies to save for your children’s Education

2min
page 57

Gerard’s Specialty Foods

2min
page 56

$2000 for Healthy and Climate Smart Home

3min
page 55

Mulch Mulch Mulch

2min
page 52

Quercetin the Bountiful Bioflavonoid

2min
page 51

Seed Saving Workshop

1min
page 50

Is Tinnitus Real?

2min
page 49

Chemainus Theatre Cabaret Series

1min
pages 46-47

Fact or Fiction - Learning to Live with Bullfrogs

2min
pages 43-44

October 7th

2min
page 38

Torchbearers Art Show

1min
page 37

Cowichan Women’s Health Collective

2min
page 34

Local Pairings for your Thanksgiving Turkey

4min
pages 27-29

Science & Romance: Friends or Foes?

4min
pages 20-21

Back to School, Back to Sleep

5min
pages 32-33

Delicious Finds at reFRESH Marketplace

2min
pages 30-31

Give Thanks There’s Always Something New in Cowichan

1min
pages 24-25

Rainforest Arts Thinking and Talking Big

2min
page 19

Luschiim’s Plants

5min
pages 11-13

Fill Your Basket from a 50km Radius

2min
pages 8-9

The Traditions of Breaking Bread

2min
pages 16-17

See Harry Manx Live In Concert

3min
page 10

An Untraditional Thanksgiving

3min
page 15

Business and Arts:More than a Fist Bump

1min
page 14

Barnes & Maracle

3min
page 18

October Events

2min
page 5
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October 2021 Issue 155 by Cowichan Valley Voice - Issuu