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. 2018 Apr 18;68(5):336–347. doi: 10.1093/biosci/biy029

Table 1.

Examples of biodiversity conservation tools and actions categorized into each of the four steps of the mitigation hierarchy.

Mitigation-hierarchy step Examples of existing conservation tools and approaches
Avoid Protected areas; Alliance for Zero Extinction sites; Key Biodiversity Areas; no development in Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems (FAO vulnerable ecosystems) or critical habitat (International Finance Corporation PS6+); no damage to any listed threatened species or ecosystems (IUCN Red List of threatened species and ecosystems; national conservation list species); no damage to intact habitat, UNESCO World Heritage Sites, or Wilderness Areas.
Minimize Sustainable use; agrienvironment schemes; shift from passive nonselective gear to actively targeted gear in fisheries; multiuse protected areas; payment for ecosystem services; demand reduction; certification and ecolabeling; economic incentives (market prices, taxes, subsidies, and other signals); green infrastructure; corporate environmental strategies and operations; maintenance of ecosystem resilience.
Remediate Rewilding; restoration; natural flooding of wetlands; artificial habitat creation; deextinction.
Offset Degraded ecosystem restoration away from impact site; averted risk; reseeding or respawning; 
captive breeding; invasive removal; species creation.

Conservation tool or action that can shift between steps of the mitigation hierarchy depending on (a) whether the biodiversity baseline is set at a present-day or historic point in time and (b) what national and regional legislation is in place to enforce the action taken.