Samper Cristián
National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, 10th Street and Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20560, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2004 Apr 29;359(1444):721-8. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2004.1476.
In 1992, with the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro and the subsequent Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), the world changed for the science of taxonomy. Many taxonomists appear not to have noticed this change, but it has significantly altered the political climate in which taxonomic research is undertaken. By the late 1990s it was clear that effective implementation of the CBD needed the participation of and funding for the taxonomic community. In this paper, I chart the rise of the Global Taxonomy Initiative (GTI), review some of its goals and explore how it interacts with the CBD. The interactions of the GTI with the Global Environment Facility, a potential funding body, are explored, as are the possible synergies between the GTI and the many other global initiatives linking to taxonomy. Finally, I explore some of the challenges ahead as taxonomy begins to take a front seat in the implementation of environmental policy on the world stage.
1992年,随着在里约热内卢召开的联合国环境与发展会议以及随后的《生物多样性公约》(CBD)的出台,分类学这门科学的世界发生了变化。许多分类学家似乎并未注意到这一变化,但它已显著改变了进行分类学研究的政治环境。到20世纪90年代末,很明显,有效实施《生物多样性公约》需要分类学界的参与和资金支持。在本文中,我梳理了全球分类学倡议(GTI)的兴起,回顾了它的一些目标,并探讨了它与《生物多样性公约》的相互作用。还探讨了GTI与潜在的资金提供机构全球环境基金的相互作用,以及GTI与许多其他与分类学相关的全球倡议之间可能存在的协同作用。最后,我探讨了随着分类学开始在世界舞台上的环境政策实施中占据前沿位置而面临的一些挑战。