Yongping Yang, Harald Schneider, Ahimsa Campos-Arceiz
{"title":"Integrative Conservation: A new journal from the conservation frontline Integrative Conservation—来自生物多样性热点地区的保护类新刊","authors":"Yongping Yang, Harald Schneider, Ahimsa Campos-Arceiz","doi":"10.1002/inc3.14","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Welcome to the opening issue of <i>Integrative Conservation</i>, a new global journal for biodiversity conservation, published by the Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden (XTBG), part of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS).</p><p>XTBG is located in tropical Asia (22°N, 101°E)—more specifically in the region where China, Laos, and Myanmar are stitched together by the waters of the Mekong (<i>Lancang</i>) river, not far from Vietnam and Thailand (Figure 1). This region, in the northern part of the Indoburmese Biodiversity Hotspot, is famous for its rich biological and cultural diversity and epitomizes many of the key conservation issues of the 21st century. Within a 50-km radius of our institute, there are dramatic examples of recent or ongoing rainforest loss and fragmentation, poaching, illegal wildlife trade, intense human–wildlife conflicts, and ecosystems threatened by climate change; but also the ongoing establishment and expansion of protected areas, the recovery of charismatic floristic and megafauna populations, rich local ecological knowledge, top-notch technology applied to the monitoring and conservation of rare species, ambitious ecological restoration initiatives, international cooperation for transboundary conservation, and world-class research. Against many odds, from this “remote corner” of tropical China, XTBG has become one of the leading institutions in conservation science and capacity building in tropical Asia (Qiu, <span>2009</span>). To further expand the services supplied to biodiversity conservation, XTBG is now launching this journal, <i>Integrative Conservation</i>, that is distinct from conservation journals published in Amsterdam, London, or New York, in that it is a journal from the conservation frontline.</p><p>Biodiversity conservation is arguably the most critical environmental challenge of our time, especially due to the irreversibility of extinction (Pimm, <span>2021</span>). Tackling this challenge requires more and better knowledge of biodiversity and its threats at different scales, and innovative approaches specifically designed for the effective conservation of biodiversity and natural resources. Biodiversity conservation is a young and still evolving academic discipline. The global scientific output has grown considerably and continues to do so (Figure 2). Despite this, massive knowledge gaps remain to be addressed (e.g., Nguyen et al., <span>2021</span>; Scheffers et al., <span>2012</span>), resulting in a pressing need for more research on biodiversity conservation and—or so we think—additional journals to publish this newly-generated knowledge. Arguably, journals are urgently needed with a broader interdisciplinary take-on to biodiversity conservation.</p><p>China is one of the so-called megadiverse countries—ranking fourth overall in terms of National Biodiversity Index (Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, <span>2011</span>). Most importantly, by embedding the goal of “achieving an Ecological Civilization” into China's constitution in 2018, China marked a tipping point not only in China's approach to biodiversity conservation but showing an important commitment toward a sustainable future of humanity (Wei et al., <span>2021</span>). China has also become a major scientific powerhouse across disciplines (Wagner et al., <span>2022</span>; Zhu & Liu, <span>2020</span>), hence, it is no surprise that biodiversity conservation research has experienced a steep growth in China (Figure 2). In 2021, 13.4% of the global scientific output on biodiversity conservation had a first author affiliated to Chinese research institutions, only second to the research produced in the United States (18.3%; Figure 3). Examining where leading conservation research is published, however, it is surprising that none of the 70 journals listed under “biodiversity conservation” in Clarivate's 2022 Journal Citation Reports is published in China, and only 4.3% (i.e., three journals) are published in Asia. In contrast, 84.3% of the list's journals are based in Europe and North America (Figure 3). This lack of leading conservation journals in China and other biodiversity-rich regions reflects historical patterns but it is an anomaly that should be overcome to sustain progress in conservation research and implementation.</p><p>It is widely accepted that effective biodiversity conservation needs local expertise in the different stages of the conservation process, including multiple research approaches and integration of expertise that is geographically and academically distinctly distributed. In the past decade, there have been multiple calls to enhance geographical diversity among editorial boards (Campos-Arceiz et al., <span>2018</span>; Mahdjoub et al., <span>2022</span>), reviewers (Primack et al., <span>2017</span>), and authors (Maas et al., <span>2021</span>; Mammides et al., <span>2016</span>) in biodiversity conservation journals. We acknowledge the commendable progress made in this regard. Biodiversity conservation, however, also needs to diversify where its science is published and we would like to see more conservation journals published in biodiversity-rich countries such as Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, South Africa, Madagascar, India, Indonesia, and of course China; countries where effective conservation is most needed. It was in this context that we decided to launch <i>Integrative Conservation</i>.</p><p>Biodiversity conservation is a wicked problem (DeFries & Nagendra, <span>2017</span>). Ecosystems are inherently complex, yet complexity increases even further when we introduce the human dimensions involved in managing and conserving them. In his seminal paper on <i>what is conservation biology</i>, Soulé (<span>1985</span>) emphasized the need for interdisciplinary approaches, describing conservation biology as a synthetic, eclectic, and holistic academic discipline. A quarter of a century later, Kareiva and Marvier (<span>2012</span>) further stressed the need for interdisciplinary integration in conservation science. We agree that, for conservation to be useful, we need to integrate different research methods, academic disciplines, and even forms of knowledge for the common goal of preserving biodiversity, ecological function, ecosystem services, and evolutionary processes. Hence <i>integrative</i> in the name of the journal.</p><p>While evidence-based, conservation is a normative discipline (i.e., it makes value judgments about desirable and undesirable outcomes; Soulé, <span>1985</span>), which inevitably introduces elements of subjectivity and room for discrepancies. The conservation literature has seen heated—sometimes bitter—arguments such as the SLOSS debate (e.g., Fahrig et al., <span>2022</span>) or the recent New Conservation controversy (e.g., Hance, <span>2016</span>). This new journal, <i>Integrative Conservation</i>, will willingly host controversial and sometimes conflicting scientific ideas, understanding that such discrepancies and debates are essential for progress in conservation, even if sometimes it involves making mistakes. Shying away from risky ideas would be a disfavor to conservation.</p><p>Being in a middle-income country, we are fully aware of the challenges posed by paywalls and article processing fees (APCs) for many readers and authors. To address this issue, <i>Integrative Conservation</i> will be published entirely as Open Access, that is, freely accessible to anyone with an internet connection. Additionally, XTBG will not make any profit from the journal. Initially (until the end of 2024), all APCs will be waived. Subsequently, XTBG will establish a system of selective APC waivers to facilitate publication to authors from middle- and low-income countries.</p><p><i>Integrative Conservation</i> will be published in English because this is the <i>lingua franca</i> of sciences, including conservation. But we are aware that English language can be another barrier (Amano et al., <span>2016</span>) and are sympathetic with authors for whom this is not their first language (it is not ours either!). Our Editorial Office will facilitate language editing in cases where it is deemed appropriate based on the quality of the research and the relevance of the conservation issue addressed. Additionally, all published articles will have online Abstracts in Chinese and other relevant languages and we encourage authors to provide a <i>plain language summary</i> and <i>practitioner key points</i> in English and the most relevant language(s) for their work.</p><p><i>Integrative Conservation</i> is the result of years of planning. It has been conceived as a generalist and interdisciplinary journal, encompassing a wide range of perspectives and scholarly disciplines relevant for our understanding and conservation of biodiversity. <i>Integrative Conservation</i> will publish papers with clear relevance for the theory, practice, or policy of biodiversity conservation. It will cover a wide range of conservation science sub-disciplines, including organismal, population, community, and landscape ecology, evolution, systematics, conservation genetics/genomics, biodiversity, behavior, botany, zoology, conservation physiology, conservation planning, policy, and different aspects of economic and social sciences, as long as there is a direct relevance for biodiversity conservation. We will publish papers from all kinds of taxa, biomes, and geographical regions, although a certain bias in the volume of submissions from Asian and tropical ecosystems may be expected given the geographical location of the journal's publishing institution.</p><p><i>Integrative Conservation</i> will publish original research (full articles and short notes), reviews, opinion pieces, methods, policy, practice perspectives, and others. We will publish local case studies when they meet high-quality academic standards and are considered to add value to conservation, beyond the local scale. <i>Integrative Conservation</i> will also publish special issues and sections organized by guest editors.</p><p>We want the experience of contributing—either as authors, reviewers, or editors—to <i>Integrative Conservation</i> to be as frictionless and positive as possible. For this reason, XTBG has partnered with Wiley, the global leading publisher in ecology and conservation. This partnership guarantees a professional and timely handling of the whole publication process, and, hopefully, a positive experience for all parts involved. We are particularly keen in creating adequate conditions for a quality review process without pressing reviewers with very short timelines that add modest scientific or conservation benefits but may compromise the quality of the review. With the aim of keeping a balance between review quality and timely decision-making, we aim for a 6-week period from submission to the first editorial decision.</p><p><i>Integrative Conservation</i> is launching with a small editorial board that has been carefully designed to meet high standards of academic excellence, internationalization, and functional diversity. As the journal develops, the editorial board will expand, aiming for a composition that represents a wide range of areas of expertise, all continents (bar Antarctica) and at least 10 megadiverse countries (<i>sensu</i> Mittermeier et al., <span>1997</span>), different career stages, and where either gender represents at least 40% of the board members.</p><p>In this inaugural issue, we want to emphasize that <i>Integrative Conservation</i> is work in progress. As the journal develops and establishes, we will use a tinkering approach where we might try new things, retaining those that work and discarding those that do not.</p><p>In 2010, the United Nations Environmental Program and the parties of the Convention on Biological Diversity agreed to a vision for Living in Harmony with Nature where “by 2050, biodiversity will be valued, conserved, restored, and wisely used, maintaining ecosystem services, sustaining a healthy planet and delivering benefits essential for all people” (Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, <span>2020</span>). By 2050, <i>Integrative Conservation</i> will be 28 years old. By then, we hope to look back and see that our efforts developing this journal from the conservation frontline have contributed to the noble goals of creating an “Ecological Civilization” and achieving the UN target of “Living in Harmony with Nature.”</p>","PeriodicalId":100680,"journal":{"name":"Integrative Conservation","volume":"1 1","pages":"1-5"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-12-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/inc3.14","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Integrative Conservation: A new journal from the conservation frontline\\n Integrative Conservation—来自生物多样性热点地区的保护类新刊\",\"authors\":\"Yongping Yang, Harald Schneider, Ahimsa Campos-Arceiz\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/inc3.14\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Welcome to the opening issue of <i>Integrative Conservation</i>, a new global journal for biodiversity conservation, published by the Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden (XTBG), part of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS).</p><p>XTBG is located in tropical Asia (22°N, 101°E)—more specifically in the region where China, Laos, and Myanmar are stitched together by the waters of the Mekong (<i>Lancang</i>) river, not far from Vietnam and Thailand (Figure 1). This region, in the northern part of the Indoburmese Biodiversity Hotspot, is famous for its rich biological and cultural diversity and epitomizes many of the key conservation issues of the 21st century. Within a 50-km radius of our institute, there are dramatic examples of recent or ongoing rainforest loss and fragmentation, poaching, illegal wildlife trade, intense human–wildlife conflicts, and ecosystems threatened by climate change; but also the ongoing establishment and expansion of protected areas, the recovery of charismatic floristic and megafauna populations, rich local ecological knowledge, top-notch technology applied to the monitoring and conservation of rare species, ambitious ecological restoration initiatives, international cooperation for transboundary conservation, and world-class research. Against many odds, from this “remote corner” of tropical China, XTBG has become one of the leading institutions in conservation science and capacity building in tropical Asia (Qiu, <span>2009</span>). To further expand the services supplied to biodiversity conservation, XTBG is now launching this journal, <i>Integrative Conservation</i>, that is distinct from conservation journals published in Amsterdam, London, or New York, in that it is a journal from the conservation frontline.</p><p>Biodiversity conservation is arguably the most critical environmental challenge of our time, especially due to the irreversibility of extinction (Pimm, <span>2021</span>). Tackling this challenge requires more and better knowledge of biodiversity and its threats at different scales, and innovative approaches specifically designed for the effective conservation of biodiversity and natural resources. Biodiversity conservation is a young and still evolving academic discipline. The global scientific output has grown considerably and continues to do so (Figure 2). Despite this, massive knowledge gaps remain to be addressed (e.g., Nguyen et al., <span>2021</span>; Scheffers et al., <span>2012</span>), resulting in a pressing need for more research on biodiversity conservation and—or so we think—additional journals to publish this newly-generated knowledge. Arguably, journals are urgently needed with a broader interdisciplinary take-on to biodiversity conservation.</p><p>China is one of the so-called megadiverse countries—ranking fourth overall in terms of National Biodiversity Index (Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, <span>2011</span>). Most importantly, by embedding the goal of “achieving an Ecological Civilization” into China's constitution in 2018, China marked a tipping point not only in China's approach to biodiversity conservation but showing an important commitment toward a sustainable future of humanity (Wei et al., <span>2021</span>). China has also become a major scientific powerhouse across disciplines (Wagner et al., <span>2022</span>; Zhu & Liu, <span>2020</span>), hence, it is no surprise that biodiversity conservation research has experienced a steep growth in China (Figure 2). In 2021, 13.4% of the global scientific output on biodiversity conservation had a first author affiliated to Chinese research institutions, only second to the research produced in the United States (18.3%; Figure 3). Examining where leading conservation research is published, however, it is surprising that none of the 70 journals listed under “biodiversity conservation” in Clarivate's 2022 Journal Citation Reports is published in China, and only 4.3% (i.e., three journals) are published in Asia. In contrast, 84.3% of the list's journals are based in Europe and North America (Figure 3). This lack of leading conservation journals in China and other biodiversity-rich regions reflects historical patterns but it is an anomaly that should be overcome to sustain progress in conservation research and implementation.</p><p>It is widely accepted that effective biodiversity conservation needs local expertise in the different stages of the conservation process, including multiple research approaches and integration of expertise that is geographically and academically distinctly distributed. In the past decade, there have been multiple calls to enhance geographical diversity among editorial boards (Campos-Arceiz et al., <span>2018</span>; Mahdjoub et al., <span>2022</span>), reviewers (Primack et al., <span>2017</span>), and authors (Maas et al., <span>2021</span>; Mammides et al., <span>2016</span>) in biodiversity conservation journals. We acknowledge the commendable progress made in this regard. Biodiversity conservation, however, also needs to diversify where its science is published and we would like to see more conservation journals published in biodiversity-rich countries such as Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, South Africa, Madagascar, India, Indonesia, and of course China; countries where effective conservation is most needed. It was in this context that we decided to launch <i>Integrative Conservation</i>.</p><p>Biodiversity conservation is a wicked problem (DeFries & Nagendra, <span>2017</span>). Ecosystems are inherently complex, yet complexity increases even further when we introduce the human dimensions involved in managing and conserving them. In his seminal paper on <i>what is conservation biology</i>, Soulé (<span>1985</span>) emphasized the need for interdisciplinary approaches, describing conservation biology as a synthetic, eclectic, and holistic academic discipline. A quarter of a century later, Kareiva and Marvier (<span>2012</span>) further stressed the need for interdisciplinary integration in conservation science. We agree that, for conservation to be useful, we need to integrate different research methods, academic disciplines, and even forms of knowledge for the common goal of preserving biodiversity, ecological function, ecosystem services, and evolutionary processes. Hence <i>integrative</i> in the name of the journal.</p><p>While evidence-based, conservation is a normative discipline (i.e., it makes value judgments about desirable and undesirable outcomes; Soulé, <span>1985</span>), which inevitably introduces elements of subjectivity and room for discrepancies. The conservation literature has seen heated—sometimes bitter—arguments such as the SLOSS debate (e.g., Fahrig et al., <span>2022</span>) or the recent New Conservation controversy (e.g., Hance, <span>2016</span>). This new journal, <i>Integrative Conservation</i>, will willingly host controversial and sometimes conflicting scientific ideas, understanding that such discrepancies and debates are essential for progress in conservation, even if sometimes it involves making mistakes. Shying away from risky ideas would be a disfavor to conservation.</p><p>Being in a middle-income country, we are fully aware of the challenges posed by paywalls and article processing fees (APCs) for many readers and authors. To address this issue, <i>Integrative Conservation</i> will be published entirely as Open Access, that is, freely accessible to anyone with an internet connection. Additionally, XTBG will not make any profit from the journal. Initially (until the end of 2024), all APCs will be waived. Subsequently, XTBG will establish a system of selective APC waivers to facilitate publication to authors from middle- and low-income countries.</p><p><i>Integrative Conservation</i> will be published in English because this is the <i>lingua franca</i> of sciences, including conservation. But we are aware that English language can be another barrier (Amano et al., <span>2016</span>) and are sympathetic with authors for whom this is not their first language (it is not ours either!). Our Editorial Office will facilitate language editing in cases where it is deemed appropriate based on the quality of the research and the relevance of the conservation issue addressed. Additionally, all published articles will have online Abstracts in Chinese and other relevant languages and we encourage authors to provide a <i>plain language summary</i> and <i>practitioner key points</i> in English and the most relevant language(s) for their work.</p><p><i>Integrative Conservation</i> is the result of years of planning. It has been conceived as a generalist and interdisciplinary journal, encompassing a wide range of perspectives and scholarly disciplines relevant for our understanding and conservation of biodiversity. <i>Integrative Conservation</i> will publish papers with clear relevance for the theory, practice, or policy of biodiversity conservation. It will cover a wide range of conservation science sub-disciplines, including organismal, population, community, and landscape ecology, evolution, systematics, conservation genetics/genomics, biodiversity, behavior, botany, zoology, conservation physiology, conservation planning, policy, and different aspects of economic and social sciences, as long as there is a direct relevance for biodiversity conservation. We will publish papers from all kinds of taxa, biomes, and geographical regions, although a certain bias in the volume of submissions from Asian and tropical ecosystems may be expected given the geographical location of the journal's publishing institution.</p><p><i>Integrative Conservation</i> will publish original research (full articles and short notes), reviews, opinion pieces, methods, policy, practice perspectives, and others. We will publish local case studies when they meet high-quality academic standards and are considered to add value to conservation, beyond the local scale. <i>Integrative Conservation</i> will also publish special issues and sections organized by guest editors.</p><p>We want the experience of contributing—either as authors, reviewers, or editors—to <i>Integrative Conservation</i> to be as frictionless and positive as possible. For this reason, XTBG has partnered with Wiley, the global leading publisher in ecology and conservation. This partnership guarantees a professional and timely handling of the whole publication process, and, hopefully, a positive experience for all parts involved. We are particularly keen in creating adequate conditions for a quality review process without pressing reviewers with very short timelines that add modest scientific or conservation benefits but may compromise the quality of the review. With the aim of keeping a balance between review quality and timely decision-making, we aim for a 6-week period from submission to the first editorial decision.</p><p><i>Integrative Conservation</i> is launching with a small editorial board that has been carefully designed to meet high standards of academic excellence, internationalization, and functional diversity. As the journal develops, the editorial board will expand, aiming for a composition that represents a wide range of areas of expertise, all continents (bar Antarctica) and at least 10 megadiverse countries (<i>sensu</i> Mittermeier et al., <span>1997</span>), different career stages, and where either gender represents at least 40% of the board members.</p><p>In this inaugural issue, we want to emphasize that <i>Integrative Conservation</i> is work in progress. As the journal develops and establishes, we will use a tinkering approach where we might try new things, retaining those that work and discarding those that do not.</p><p>In 2010, the United Nations Environmental Program and the parties of the Convention on Biological Diversity agreed to a vision for Living in Harmony with Nature where “by 2050, biodiversity will be valued, conserved, restored, and wisely used, maintaining ecosystem services, sustaining a healthy planet and delivering benefits essential for all people” (Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, <span>2020</span>). By 2050, <i>Integrative Conservation</i> will be 28 years old. By then, we hope to look back and see that our efforts developing this journal from the conservation frontline have contributed to the noble goals of creating an “Ecological Civilization” and achieving the UN target of “Living in Harmony with Nature.”</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":100680,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Integrative Conservation\",\"volume\":\"1 1\",\"pages\":\"1-5\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2022-12-19\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/inc3.14\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Integrative Conservation\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/inc3.14\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Integrative Conservation","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/inc3.14","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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摘要
欢迎阅读由中国科学院西双版纳热带植物园(XTBG)出版的全球生物多样性保护新期刊《综合保护》(Integrative Conservation)的第一期。XTBG位于亚洲热带地区(北纬22°,东经101°),更具体地说,位于中国、老挝和缅甸被湄公河(澜沧江)水域连接在一起的地区,距离越南和泰国不远(图1)。该地区位于印缅生物多样性热点的北部,以其丰富的生物和文化多样性而闻名,是21世纪许多关键保护问题的缩影。在我们研究所50公里的半径内,有最近或正在进行的热带雨林损失和破碎,偷猎,非法野生动物贸易,激烈的人类与野生动物冲突,以及受到气候变化威胁的生态系统的戏剧性例子;同时,保护区的不断建立和扩大,有魅力的植物和巨型动物种群的恢复,丰富的当地生态知识,用于监测和保护稀有物种的一流技术,雄心勃勃的生态恢复计划,跨界保护的国际合作,以及世界级的研究。克服重重困难,从中国热带的这个“偏远角落”,XTBG已经成为热带亚洲保护科学和能力建设的领先机构之一(Qiu, 2009)。为了进一步扩大对生物多样性保护提供的服务,XTBG现在推出了这本杂志,《综合保护》,它不同于在阿姆斯特丹、伦敦或纽约出版的保护期刊,因为它是一本来自保护前线的杂志。生物多样性保护可以说是我们这个时代最关键的环境挑战,特别是由于灭绝的不可逆性(皮姆,2021)。应对这一挑战需要更多、更好地了解不同规模的生物多样性及其威胁,以及为有效保护生物多样性和自然资源而专门设计的创新方法。生物多样性保护是一门年轻且仍在发展的学科。全球科学产出已经大幅增长,并将继续增长(图2)。尽管如此,巨大的知识缺口仍有待解决(例如,Nguyen et al., 2021;Scheffers et al., 2012),因此迫切需要对生物多样性保护进行更多的研究,或者我们认为需要更多的期刊来发表这些新产生的知识。可以说,期刊迫切需要对生物多样性保护进行更广泛的跨学科研究。中国是所谓的超级生物多样性国家之一,在国家生物多样性指数中排名第四(生物多样性公约秘书处,2011年)。最重要的是,通过在2018年将“建设生态文明”的目标纳入中国宪法,中国不仅标志着中国生物多样性保护方法的一个转折点,而且表明了对人类可持续未来的重要承诺(Wei et al., 2021)。中国也已成为一个跨学科的重要科学强国(Wagner et al., 2022;朱,Liu, 2020),因此,生物多样性保护研究在中国经历了急剧增长也就不足为奇了(图2)。2021年,全球生物多样性保护科学产出中有13.4%的第一作者隶属于中国研究机构,仅次于美国(18.3%;然而,在考察领先的保护研究的发表地点时,令人惊讶的是,在Clarivate的2022年期刊引文报告中,“生物多样性保护”项下列出的70种期刊中,没有一种是在中国发表的,只有4.3%(即3种期刊)在亚洲发表。相比之下,84.3%的榜单期刊位于欧洲和北美(图3)。中国和其他生物多样性丰富地区缺乏领先的保护期刊反映了历史模式,但这是一种反常现象,需要克服,以保持保护研究和实施的进展。人们普遍认为,有效的生物多样性保护需要不同阶段的本地专业知识,包括多种研究方法和地理和学术分布明显的专业知识的整合。在过去十年中,有多次呼吁加强编辑委员会之间的地理多样性(Campos-Arceiz等人,2018;Mahdjoub等人,2022)、审稿人(Primack等人,2017)和作者(Maas等人,2021;Mammides et al., 2016),生物多样性保护期刊。我们承认在这方面取得了值得赞扬的进展。 我们希望无论是作为作者、审稿人还是编辑,为《综合保护》做出贡献的经历都尽可能地顺畅和积极。出于这个原因,XTBG与全球领先的生态和保护出版商Wiley合作。这种伙伴关系保证了整个出版过程的专业和及时处理,并希望为所有相关部分提供积极的体验。我们特别热衷于为质量审查过程创造适当的条件,而不是用非常短的时间给审稿人施加压力,这会增加适度的科学或保护效益,但可能会损害审查的质量。为了在评审质量和及时决策之间保持平衡,我们的目标是从投稿到第一次编辑决定的6周时间。《综合保护》由一个精心设计的小型编辑委员会启动,以满足学术卓越、国际化和功能多样性的高标准。随着期刊的发展,编辑委员会将扩大,目标是组成一个代表广泛的专业领域,所有大陆(南极洲除外)和至少10个超级多样化的国家(sensu Mittermeier et al., 1997),不同的职业阶段,并且任何性别都至少占董事会成员的40%。在这一期创刊号中,我们想强调的是,综合保护正在进行中。随着期刊的发展和建立,我们将采用一种修修补补的方法,尝试新事物,保留那些有效的,丢弃那些无效的。2010年,联合国环境规划署和《生物多样性公约》缔约方商定了与自然和谐相处的愿景,其中“到2050年,生物多样性将得到重视、保护、恢复和明智利用,维持生态系统服务,维持健康的地球,并为所有人带来必不可少的利益”(《生物多样性公约》秘书处,2020年)。到2050年,综合保护将迎来28年的历史。到那时,我们希望回顾过去,看到我们从保护第一线发展这本杂志的努力,为创建“生态文明”的崇高目标和实现联合国“与自然和谐相处”的目标做出了贡献。
Integrative Conservation: A new journal from the conservation frontline
Integrative Conservation—来自生物多样性热点地区的保护类新刊
Welcome to the opening issue of Integrative Conservation, a new global journal for biodiversity conservation, published by the Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden (XTBG), part of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS).
XTBG is located in tropical Asia (22°N, 101°E)—more specifically in the region where China, Laos, and Myanmar are stitched together by the waters of the Mekong (Lancang) river, not far from Vietnam and Thailand (Figure 1). This region, in the northern part of the Indoburmese Biodiversity Hotspot, is famous for its rich biological and cultural diversity and epitomizes many of the key conservation issues of the 21st century. Within a 50-km radius of our institute, there are dramatic examples of recent or ongoing rainforest loss and fragmentation, poaching, illegal wildlife trade, intense human–wildlife conflicts, and ecosystems threatened by climate change; but also the ongoing establishment and expansion of protected areas, the recovery of charismatic floristic and megafauna populations, rich local ecological knowledge, top-notch technology applied to the monitoring and conservation of rare species, ambitious ecological restoration initiatives, international cooperation for transboundary conservation, and world-class research. Against many odds, from this “remote corner” of tropical China, XTBG has become one of the leading institutions in conservation science and capacity building in tropical Asia (Qiu, 2009). To further expand the services supplied to biodiversity conservation, XTBG is now launching this journal, Integrative Conservation, that is distinct from conservation journals published in Amsterdam, London, or New York, in that it is a journal from the conservation frontline.
Biodiversity conservation is arguably the most critical environmental challenge of our time, especially due to the irreversibility of extinction (Pimm, 2021). Tackling this challenge requires more and better knowledge of biodiversity and its threats at different scales, and innovative approaches specifically designed for the effective conservation of biodiversity and natural resources. Biodiversity conservation is a young and still evolving academic discipline. The global scientific output has grown considerably and continues to do so (Figure 2). Despite this, massive knowledge gaps remain to be addressed (e.g., Nguyen et al., 2021; Scheffers et al., 2012), resulting in a pressing need for more research on biodiversity conservation and—or so we think—additional journals to publish this newly-generated knowledge. Arguably, journals are urgently needed with a broader interdisciplinary take-on to biodiversity conservation.
China is one of the so-called megadiverse countries—ranking fourth overall in terms of National Biodiversity Index (Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, 2011). Most importantly, by embedding the goal of “achieving an Ecological Civilization” into China's constitution in 2018, China marked a tipping point not only in China's approach to biodiversity conservation but showing an important commitment toward a sustainable future of humanity (Wei et al., 2021). China has also become a major scientific powerhouse across disciplines (Wagner et al., 2022; Zhu & Liu, 2020), hence, it is no surprise that biodiversity conservation research has experienced a steep growth in China (Figure 2). In 2021, 13.4% of the global scientific output on biodiversity conservation had a first author affiliated to Chinese research institutions, only second to the research produced in the United States (18.3%; Figure 3). Examining where leading conservation research is published, however, it is surprising that none of the 70 journals listed under “biodiversity conservation” in Clarivate's 2022 Journal Citation Reports is published in China, and only 4.3% (i.e., three journals) are published in Asia. In contrast, 84.3% of the list's journals are based in Europe and North America (Figure 3). This lack of leading conservation journals in China and other biodiversity-rich regions reflects historical patterns but it is an anomaly that should be overcome to sustain progress in conservation research and implementation.
It is widely accepted that effective biodiversity conservation needs local expertise in the different stages of the conservation process, including multiple research approaches and integration of expertise that is geographically and academically distinctly distributed. In the past decade, there have been multiple calls to enhance geographical diversity among editorial boards (Campos-Arceiz et al., 2018; Mahdjoub et al., 2022), reviewers (Primack et al., 2017), and authors (Maas et al., 2021; Mammides et al., 2016) in biodiversity conservation journals. We acknowledge the commendable progress made in this regard. Biodiversity conservation, however, also needs to diversify where its science is published and we would like to see more conservation journals published in biodiversity-rich countries such as Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, South Africa, Madagascar, India, Indonesia, and of course China; countries where effective conservation is most needed. It was in this context that we decided to launch Integrative Conservation.
Biodiversity conservation is a wicked problem (DeFries & Nagendra, 2017). Ecosystems are inherently complex, yet complexity increases even further when we introduce the human dimensions involved in managing and conserving them. In his seminal paper on what is conservation biology, Soulé (1985) emphasized the need for interdisciplinary approaches, describing conservation biology as a synthetic, eclectic, and holistic academic discipline. A quarter of a century later, Kareiva and Marvier (2012) further stressed the need for interdisciplinary integration in conservation science. We agree that, for conservation to be useful, we need to integrate different research methods, academic disciplines, and even forms of knowledge for the common goal of preserving biodiversity, ecological function, ecosystem services, and evolutionary processes. Hence integrative in the name of the journal.
While evidence-based, conservation is a normative discipline (i.e., it makes value judgments about desirable and undesirable outcomes; Soulé, 1985), which inevitably introduces elements of subjectivity and room for discrepancies. The conservation literature has seen heated—sometimes bitter—arguments such as the SLOSS debate (e.g., Fahrig et al., 2022) or the recent New Conservation controversy (e.g., Hance, 2016). This new journal, Integrative Conservation, will willingly host controversial and sometimes conflicting scientific ideas, understanding that such discrepancies and debates are essential for progress in conservation, even if sometimes it involves making mistakes. Shying away from risky ideas would be a disfavor to conservation.
Being in a middle-income country, we are fully aware of the challenges posed by paywalls and article processing fees (APCs) for many readers and authors. To address this issue, Integrative Conservation will be published entirely as Open Access, that is, freely accessible to anyone with an internet connection. Additionally, XTBG will not make any profit from the journal. Initially (until the end of 2024), all APCs will be waived. Subsequently, XTBG will establish a system of selective APC waivers to facilitate publication to authors from middle- and low-income countries.
Integrative Conservation will be published in English because this is the lingua franca of sciences, including conservation. But we are aware that English language can be another barrier (Amano et al., 2016) and are sympathetic with authors for whom this is not their first language (it is not ours either!). Our Editorial Office will facilitate language editing in cases where it is deemed appropriate based on the quality of the research and the relevance of the conservation issue addressed. Additionally, all published articles will have online Abstracts in Chinese and other relevant languages and we encourage authors to provide a plain language summary and practitioner key points in English and the most relevant language(s) for their work.
Integrative Conservation is the result of years of planning. It has been conceived as a generalist and interdisciplinary journal, encompassing a wide range of perspectives and scholarly disciplines relevant for our understanding and conservation of biodiversity. Integrative Conservation will publish papers with clear relevance for the theory, practice, or policy of biodiversity conservation. It will cover a wide range of conservation science sub-disciplines, including organismal, population, community, and landscape ecology, evolution, systematics, conservation genetics/genomics, biodiversity, behavior, botany, zoology, conservation physiology, conservation planning, policy, and different aspects of economic and social sciences, as long as there is a direct relevance for biodiversity conservation. We will publish papers from all kinds of taxa, biomes, and geographical regions, although a certain bias in the volume of submissions from Asian and tropical ecosystems may be expected given the geographical location of the journal's publishing institution.
Integrative Conservation will publish original research (full articles and short notes), reviews, opinion pieces, methods, policy, practice perspectives, and others. We will publish local case studies when they meet high-quality academic standards and are considered to add value to conservation, beyond the local scale. Integrative Conservation will also publish special issues and sections organized by guest editors.
We want the experience of contributing—either as authors, reviewers, or editors—to Integrative Conservation to be as frictionless and positive as possible. For this reason, XTBG has partnered with Wiley, the global leading publisher in ecology and conservation. This partnership guarantees a professional and timely handling of the whole publication process, and, hopefully, a positive experience for all parts involved. We are particularly keen in creating adequate conditions for a quality review process without pressing reviewers with very short timelines that add modest scientific or conservation benefits but may compromise the quality of the review. With the aim of keeping a balance between review quality and timely decision-making, we aim for a 6-week period from submission to the first editorial decision.
Integrative Conservation is launching with a small editorial board that has been carefully designed to meet high standards of academic excellence, internationalization, and functional diversity. As the journal develops, the editorial board will expand, aiming for a composition that represents a wide range of areas of expertise, all continents (bar Antarctica) and at least 10 megadiverse countries (sensu Mittermeier et al., 1997), different career stages, and where either gender represents at least 40% of the board members.
In this inaugural issue, we want to emphasize that Integrative Conservation is work in progress. As the journal develops and establishes, we will use a tinkering approach where we might try new things, retaining those that work and discarding those that do not.
In 2010, the United Nations Environmental Program and the parties of the Convention on Biological Diversity agreed to a vision for Living in Harmony with Nature where “by 2050, biodiversity will be valued, conserved, restored, and wisely used, maintaining ecosystem services, sustaining a healthy planet and delivering benefits essential for all people” (Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, 2020). By 2050, Integrative Conservation will be 28 years old. By then, we hope to look back and see that our efforts developing this journal from the conservation frontline have contributed to the noble goals of creating an “Ecological Civilization” and achieving the UN target of “Living in Harmony with Nature.”