
Photo Credits: Tim Bruijninckx – VSF-B
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Environmental Stewardship in Biodiversity Conservation
The Core Concept: Environmental stewardship encompasses the reciprocal relationships, intentional practices, and ancestral knowledge of Indigenous and local communities used to manage and protect the natural environment. Integrating these practices into scientific and political frameworks aims to achieve more inclusive, socially just, and effective nature conservation.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike conventional, top-down conservation models that often exclude human activity or focus strictly on isolated taxa, this approach views biophysical management as inextricably linked to spiritual, social, and political dimensions. It relies on the mutual care and intentional management between human communities and "key cultural species" within a broader socio-ecological system.
Origin/History: A comprehensive global framework for this approach was recently presented by researchers at the University of Barcelona (led by Giulia Mattalia and Irene Teixidor). By reviewing hundreds of scientific articles, the team cataloged traditional management practices targeting nearly 1,000 culturally significant species worldwide, marking the first global-scale review of its kind.




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