Campo Grande, Brazil (UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News / WAM – 24 Mar, 2026) Governments, scientists, environmentalists, indigenous peoples and local communities have come together here to address the pressing conservation challenges facing migratory species crossing international borders.
The fifteenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties (CMS CoP15) to the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals was launched in He walks 23 inches Campo Grande, Brazil Until the end of the week (29 He walks).
Held under the theme “Connecting Nature to Sustain Life,” CMS CoP15 will emphasize the critical importance of ecological connectivity to conserve ecosystems that are critical to both migratory species and human well-being.
Half the worldGDP depends directly or indirectly on nature. Therefore, protecting species and ecosystems is not only an environmental necessity, but also an economic and social necessity.
The high-level meeting will address an ambitious set of actions to deal with the current global biodiversity crisis, such as:
Promoting global and coordinated conservation of migratory species
An additional 44 fish, birds and wildlife were placed under protection
Implement new, targeted protection measures to address urgent needs and threats
Combat illegal taking and address overexploitation of species, including overuse and bycatch
Strengthening ecological connectivity to protect vital migration corridors and networks and enhance ecosystem resilience
Promoting sustainable infrastructure and reducing negative impacts on migratory species
Addressing challenges facing migratory species through global cooperation by enhancing synergies with other multilateral environmental agreements
CMS CoP15 is a starting point for multilateral cooperation in the field of… road To the seventeenth Conference of the Parties on Biodiversity held in October this year.
Protecting migratory species and reducing negative impacts on them is key to achieving international biodiversity commitments under the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework.