Addressing biodiversity loss requires both protection of remaining intact ecosystems and active restoration of degraded ones. A suite of strategies at different scales — from gene banks to international treaties — form the toolkit of contemporary conservation.
Strategies range from in situ (in place) to ex situ (outside natural habitat):
| Approach | In Situ / Ex Situ | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Protected areas | In situ | National parks, marine reserves |
| Wildlife corridors | In situ | Connecting fragmented habitats |
| Translocation | In situ (new site) | Moving individuals to safe habitat |
| Captive breeding | Ex situ | Zoo programs |
| Gene banks | Ex situ | Frozen seeds, tissue banks |
| Habitat restoration | In situ | Revegetation, weed control |
Building resilience requires strategies that address the root causes of vulnerability:
Restoration of degraded ecosystems focuses on re-establishing:
- Native plant communities (primary producers and habitat engineers)
- Soil function (microorganism communities, soil structure)
- Hydrological function (natural water flow, wetland areas)
- Fauna communities (top-down trophic function via apex predators)
Ecosystem engineering — reintroduction of species that modify habitats for others (beavers, elephants, large grazing mammals) — is increasingly recognised as a restoration tool.
KEY TAKEAWAY: No single strategy is sufficient — effective biodiversity conservation combines protected areas, corridors, translocation, captive breeding and restoration in an integrated landscape approach. VCAA expects you to explain the rationale for each strategy and identify which threats each addresses.