Dates / Project duration
April 2018 - March 2020 / 2 years
Study on climate change and its effects
Monaco
Sino-vietnamese border
American Museum of Naturel History
?©Preben-Nilsen
The Center for Biodiversity and Conservation (CBC) at the American Museum of Natural History proposes an initiative that protects key endangered species in the Mekong region as habitats and threats shift due to a changing climate. Building on longstanding relationships with local researchers, NGOs, and national and local government partners in Southeast Asia, this work demonstrates the importance of coordinated, evidence-based trans-border conservation management in the face of imminent change.
The CBC leads a team of local researchers to understand probabilities of risk from climate change and adjacent threats for a suite of ecologically important endangered species that live along this border, such as the Tonkin snub-nosed monkey, the Cao Vit gibbon, and the Tam Dao salamander.
The outcomes of these researches is an effective modeling tools for policy makers and other key actors to use in current transboundary conservation planning activities.