This is the Society's flagship journal founded in 1987
to provide a global voice for an emerging discipline, conservation biology.
The journal continues to publish groundbreaking scientific papers on topics
such as population ecology and genetics, ecosystem management, freshwater
and marine conservation, landscape ecology, and the many human dimensions
of conservation and is the most frequently cited conservation journal
in the world. Published bi-monthly, you can subscribe to the journal at
anytime. Your subscription will begin at the moment you subscribe. For
more information please choose the link above.
Published Bi-Monthly: February, April, June, August, October, December
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Conservation is a sophisticated,
readable, and practical magazine for people who are serious about conservation—managers,
policymakers, researchers, students, advocates, and funders. The model
is simple—but effective: storytelling through real-life case studies.
Begun in 2000 to offer a more summarized approach to conservation the magazine
has now increased its circulation to over 7000 subscriptions. Conservation
is published quarterly and you can subscribe at any time.
For more information please choose the link above.
Published Quarterly: January-March, April-June, July-September, October-December
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The Society strives to inform its members about conservation
biology on an international level; the activities of our membership and
activities of the Society as a whole. The Newsletter serves this purpose
quarterly with updates from Regional Sections, the Executive Office and
various other articles relating to the SCB. It is delivered quarterly to
members of the Society for Conservation Biology either electronically or
in paper. For more information please choose the link above. |
Neotropical Conservation e-Newsletter (NeoCons) is the
regional bulletin of the Society for Conservation Biology for Austral and
Neotropical America. NeoCons is distributed electronically and free of cost
to all interested individuals, regardless of whether or not they are members
of SCB or reside in the region. The purpose of NeoCons is to facilitate
information exchange in order to help strengthen the discipline of conservation
biology in Austral and Neotropical America. |