https://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/csp2.371

INTENDED CONSEQUENCES STATEMENT

As the biodiversity crisis accelerates, the stakes are higher for
threatened plants and animals. Rebuilding the health of our planet will
require addressing underlying threats at many scales, including habitat
loss and climate change. Conservation interventions such as habitat
protection, management, restoration, predator control, translocation,
genetic rescue, and biological control have the potential to help
threatened or endangered species avert extinction. These existing,
well‐tested methods can be complemented and augmented by more frequent and
faster adoption of new technologies, such as powerful new genetic tools. In
addition, synthetic biology might offer solutions to currently intractable
conservation problems. We believe that conservation needs to be bold and
clear‐eyed in this moment of great urgency.

Proposed efforts to mitigate conservation threats often raise concerns
about potentially harmful unintended consequences. For some highly
documented strategies based on conservation principles, such as biological
control, conservation translocations, and restoration of natural fire
regimes, evidence to date suggests that careful planning produces the
intended consequences while avoiding adverse unintended consequences. For
example, better identification and mitigation of risks has resulted in no
severe, negative, unintended consequences for conservation translocations
and biological control releases over the last 30 years in the United States
(Novak et al., 2021
<https://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/csp2.371#csp2371-bib-0001>
).

This progress, especially after the well‐publicized harmful interventions
from the early history of the field, has been made by improving
conservation intervention techniques, scientific understanding of dynamic
interactions in complex ecosystems, and early stakeholder engagement. The
substantial history of intervention should encourage us to thoughtfully
pursue novel approaches to conservation as the technology advances,
focusing on the future we want, rather than being daunted by the future we
fear.

In June 2020, Revive & Restore convened a group of 57 conservationists,
wildlife biologists, restoration specialists, conservation geneticists,
ethicists, and social scientists to propose a new framework for the future
of conservation, focused on intended consequences. There was broad
consensus that developing and employing what might be considered
controversial genetic technologies will require a commitment to responsible
decision‐making that respects the diversity of perspectives, interests, and
values among different stakeholders. To encourage working confidently with
emerging tools and technologies, we propose a framework that increases
inclusivity and embraces conservation innovation.
The participants of the Intended Consequences Workshop agree that:

   - Conservationists and other stakeholders should codesign conservation
   interventions to advance biodiversity goals and achieve intended
   consequences.
   - A broader definition of risk and the development of new risk
   assessment tools will facilitate appropriate risk identification and
   mitigation during intervention planning and implementation.
   - Inaction and delay also incur consequences. The risks of inaction must
   also be identified and taken into consideration.
   - Being transparent about social and cultural values is essential to
   success because science alone cannot tell us what we should do.
   - Inclusive engagement with communities and stakeholders, including
   indigenous peoples and marginalized groups, allows for a thoughtful
   exploration of diverse visions for future ecosystems and the path to a
   vibrant and resilient nature.
   - A code of practice for genetic interventions that weighs ecological
   and social risks, and potential benefits, will help conservationists,
   funders and the public make informed decisions for responsible and
   innovative action.
   - The code of practice should evolve with new knowledge, additional
   experience, and further deliberation via an inclusive process.
   - Monitoring results, both positive and negative, will help
   conservationists design successful interventions, manage uncertainty, and
   codify lessons learned along the way.

These initial points of agreement, along with an evolving code of practice,
can help guide future conservation interventions and inspire confidence in
our ability to design for and achieve intended consequences.

*The findings and conclusions in this article are those of the author(s)
and do not necessarily represent the views of: the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, CSIRO, NatureScot, Imperial College London, San Diego Zoo Global,
and National Invasive Species Council*.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The workshop that inspired this statement was supported by Revive &
Restore, University of Wisconsin‐Madison, The Nature Conservancy of
California, Gerry Ohrstrom, and Amy and Mark Tercek. We would like to thank
the editor and an anonymous reviewer who read early versions and gave
constructive feedback that improved this statement.

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