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Home Publications Climate Change / Assisted Migration The ethics of assisted colonization in the age of anthropogenic climate change

The ethics of assisted colonization in the age of anthropogenic climate change

Albrecht, G. A., Brooke, C., Bennett, D. H., Garnett, S. T. 2012. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics: 1-19
Journal Article
Justification

Global

This paper examines an issue that is becoming increasingly relevant as the pressures of a warming planet, changing climate and changing ecosystems ramp up. The broad context for the paper is the intragenerational, intergenerational, and interspecies equity implications of changing the climate and the value orientations of adapting to such change. In addition, the need to stabilize the planetary climate by urgent mitigation of change factors is a foundational ethical assumption. In order to avoid further animal and plant extinctions, or at the very least, their increased vulnerability to becoming rare and endangered; the systematic assisted colonization of "at risk" species is being seriously considered by scientists and managers of biodiversity. The more practical aspects of assisted colonization have been covered in the conservation biology literature; however, the ethical implications of such actions have not been extensively examined. Our discussion of the value issues, using a novel case study approach, will rectify the limited ethical analysis of the issue of assisted colonization of species in the face of climate change pressures.