Principles of the Conservation Commons:

1-Open Access: Promotes free and open access to data, information and knowledge for conservation purposes. 2-Mutual Benefit: Welcomes and encourages participants both to use resources and to contribute data, information and knowledge. 3-Rights and Responsibilities: Contributors have full right to attribution for any uses of their data, information, or knowledge, and the right to ensure that the original integrity of their contribution to the Commons is preserved. Users of the Conservation Commons are expected to comply, in good faith, with terms of uses specified by contributors and in accordance with these Principles.

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    a new paper by MICHAEL C. CALVER AND J. STUART BRADLEY published in the volume 24 issue 3 of the Conservation Biology comparing the number of citations of open access and non-open access papers in six journals and four books published since 2000 to test whether open access increases number of citations overall and increases citations made by authors in developing countries.

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    Catalyst Grants Program

      Creative Commons is investing up to $100,000 to empower individuals and communities deeply rooted in the principles of openness and sharing. With the Catalyst Grants program, Creative Commons will seed activities around the globe that support our mission. Our goal is to scale our community’s efforts and support them in becoming self-sustainable. Through a rigorous public review and transparent evaluation process, the best proposals submitted by CC affiliates and the broader community, will be selected to receive $1,000–$10,000 to make their ideas a reality.

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    Lucid v3.3 Free Offer

    Ten years ago the Centre for Biological Information Technology (CBIT) was established and the first in the series of Lucid identification tools was released. To celebrate this event, they are making the Lucid 3.3 version freely available. Lucid v3.3, which was released in 2006, operates on Windows98/ME/NT/2000/XP/2003/Vista, OSX, Linux, and Solaris and is capable of producing keys for deployment on CD or the Internet.

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    The Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP, Secretary of State for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, was in Cambridge this month to give the inaugural The Cambridge Conservation Initiative (CCI) Guest Lecture. Mr Benn welcomed the creation of The Cambridge Conservation Initiative as a key player in helping to evaluate and communicate the importance of ecosystems and biodiversity. He stressed the need to articulate clearly the science, and specifically the numbers, that show how ecosystems underpin economic prosperity, and to act on the economic opportunities that biodiversity conservation offers.

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