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IUCN
Red List
For the past four decades, the IUCN Species Survival Commission has been
assessing the conservation status of taxa - species, subspecies, varieties
and even selected subpopulations - on a global scale in an effort to
highlight taxa threatened with extinction and to promote their
conservation. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species provides
taxonomic, conservation status, and distribution information on taxa that
have been globally evaluated using the IUCN Red List Categories and
Criteria (the most recent version is v. 3.1 [2001]).
The Red List Categories and Criteria (in both PDF and web versions) and
the Red List Assessment Questionnaire that must be completed for each
species to be added to the Red List (in PDF format) are as follows:
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Here are a couple recent peer-reviewed articles that discuss the value of
the IUCN Red List with respect to conservation and its strengths with
respect to biodiversity indicators:
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Rodrigues A.S.L., Pilgrim, J.D., Lamoreux, J.F., Hoffmann, M. & Brooks,
T.M. 2006. The value of the IUCN Red List for conservation. Trends in
Ecology and Evolution 21:71-76.

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Butchart, S.H.M., H.R. Akcakaya, E. Kennedy & C. Hilton-Taylor. 2006.
Biodiversity indicators based on trends in conservation status: Strengths
of the IUCN Red List Index. Conservation Biology 20:579-581.

The 2006 Red List includes 239 cycad taxa (one more [= Cycas
micronesica] than the 2004 Red List). The links below represent the
search results from the 2006 Red List online database for all listed cycad taxa
(as of 6 May 2006):
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