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BGCI Celebrates Reverse the Red Day - Botanic Gardens Conservation International

Partners, civil society organisations, zoos, aquariums, botanic gardens, and communities around the world are celebrating Reverse the Red Day today. Events will be taking place online and in person at a variety of locations to celebrate this landmark day for species conservation.

The goal of Reverse the Red is simple but ambitious: we need to stop pushing our environment to the brink and relegating more species into worse status on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. To upend species and ecosystem loss, we need systemic change, which is why Reverse the Red brings together a diverse coalition of partners to collaborate, scale up aspirations and impact, and engage people from all walks of life to take action for biodiversity.

Last December, in Montreal, Canada, nearly 200 governments adopted the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) with four goals and 23 targets for 2030. We have already successfully moved over 200 species one or more steps away from extinction on the IUCN Red List. Partners like zoos, aquariums, botanic gardens, research institutions, scientific networks, governments, tribal and indigenous governments, and community members have a hand in reversing the red for these species. Contributions to breeding, husbandry, rescue and release, pathology, veterinary medicine, genetic management, education, fundraising, community engagement, and more are key to meeting targets and recovering species.

This year, Reverse the Red has launched a Species Pledge, which is collating organisational commitments from governments, zoos, aquariums, botanic gardens, and other organisations, to compile a database of strategic and impact-driven species efforts. The goal of the Species Pledge is to create a coordinated map of key actions aimed at species recovery, utilising defined impact indicators. This is a direct outcome of the World Species Congress, which will be held May 15, 2024 as a 24-hour, fully virtual event.

We hope that organisations around the world continue to support the critical work of saving species. Reversing declines and recovering biodiversity is possible. We need to accelerate and amplify successful strategies as we collaborate and together increase the collective impact for species.


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Posted On: 07/02/2024

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