| Literature DB >> 31949318 |
David E Naugle1, Brady W Allred2, Matthew O Jones3, Dirac Twidwell4, Jeremy D Maestas5.
Abstract
Conservationists are increasingly convinced that coproduction of science enhances its utility in policy, decision-making, and practice. Concomitant is a renewed reliance on privately owned working lands to sustain nature and people. We propose a coupling of these emerging trends as a better recipe for conservation. To illustrate this, we present five elements of coproduction, contrast how they differ from traditional approaches, and describe the role of scientists in successful partnerships. Readers will find coproduction more demanding than the loading dock approach to science delivery but will also find greater rewards, relevance, and impact. Because coproduction is novel and examples of it are rare, we draw on our roles as scientists within the US Department of Agriculture-led Sage Grouse Initiative, North America's largest effort to conserve the sagebrush ecosystem. As coproduction and working lands evolve, traditional approaches will be replaced in order to more holistically meet the needs of nature and people.Entities:
Keywords: Conservation outcomes; Farm Bill; coproduction; partnerships; private lands
Year: 2019 PMID: 31949318 PMCID: PMC6956880 DOI: 10.1093/biosci/biz144
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioscience ISSN: 0006-3568 Impact factor: 8.589
Figure 1.Productive working lands that support wildlife and people in the western sagebrush ecosystem. Photograph: Mandi Hirsch.
Figure 2.The marriage of coproduction and working lands conservation.
Five elements of a successful coproduced, working lands conservation approach compared with the more traditional scientific process.
| Traditional Approach | Coproduction Approach |
|---|---|
| Reactive: Scientists engage late in the process, and often in response to litigation or crisis | Shared vision: Scientists engage early in building a shared vision of desired outcomes for ecosystems and people |
| Stove piped and agency specific: Science largely confined to within-agency directives | Collaborative and partnership driven: External scientists invited to help shape conservation program delivery |
| Planning averse and opportunistic: Scientists operate outside of conservation program delivery, isolating themselves from real world applications | Strategic and targeted: Scientists inform strategic plans and help target resources to maximize return on investment |
| Output focused: Managers simply track and report on conservation actions or dollars spent with no role for science | Outcome focused: Managers work closely with scientists to quantify outcomes of conservation actions |
| Product driven: Science ends with peer-reviewed publication; scientists leave to pursue the next funded study | Process driven: Science continues within the evolving partnership by improving program delivery, identifying emerging opportunities and implementing conservation solutions |