Overview
Wildlife conservation policy refers to the laws, regulations, strategies, and management decisions developed by governments and organizations to protect wild animals and plants and the habitats they depend on. Such policies aim to preserve biodiversity, prevent overexploitation, manage protected areas, and balance human activity with the survival of species. Effective conservation policy draws on ecological evidence, including data on species distribution, population status, habitat suitability, and the threats animals face, to set priorities and guide on-the-ground action. Research in the journal contributes to the evidence base that informs conservation planning. Studies examine the migration status, anthropogenic threats, and conservation directives for a wild antelope population from an ecotourism perspective, apply geographic information systems to analyze habitat suitability for Wildlife conservation, and assess the distribution of protected areas and large mammals within a region. Together these contributions illustrate how field data on species and habitats support conservation decision-making and the design of protective measures. This page gathers peer-reviewed, open-access research relevant to Wildlife conservation policy, offering an evidence-based resource for readers interested in how scientific findings inform the protection and management of wild species and their environments.
Research published in this journal
4 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.