Biodiversity Outcomes Framework
Biodiversity - The Insurance Policy for Life Itself
Canada’s natural wealth is the envy of many nations and is supported by a strong tradition of conservation and sustainable use. An important component of this wealth is Canada’s biodiversity – the variety of genes, species and ecosystems and the ecological processes that allow them to evolve and adapt to a changing world.
Canadians care about biodiversity because it touches their lives, and their livelihoods, in very direct and personal ways.
- Canadians have rallied to support their special places and species at risk because they instinctively understand the aesthetic, recreational, spiritual and cultural importance of biodiversity.
- They also understand how biological resources meet their basic needs for food and shelter and create jobs for thousands of people who work in fisheries, forestry, agriculture and tourism.
Canadians may not make the connection, however, between biodiversity conservation and many of the things they take for granted:
- Clean air, clean water and fertile soil
- Climate regulation and control of floods and other natural hazards
- Protection from pest and disease outbreaks
- Prescription drugs and traditional medicines
- Food security
- Ecological and economic resilience
It is only when these begin to disappear that the connections become obvious. Biological diversity and everything it provides is in reality our natural insurance policy in a world that is continually changing, often in dramatic and unpredictable ways.
The Biodiversity Outcomes Framework: Building on a Decade of Federal–Provincial–Territorial Cooperation
For more than ten years, federal, provincial and territorial governments have been working together to sustain Canada’s biodiversity. Together they designed a blueprint for the conservation and sustainable use of Canada’s living resources called the Canadian Biodiversity Strategy. Some provinces and territories also have their own biodiversity strategies.
The biodiversity outcomes framework complements and builds on that work. It will be used to identify and link current and future priorities, to engage Canadians in planning and implementation and to report on progress.
Biodiversity Outcomes Framework:
Focus on “Why” “What” “How”
Vision: A society that lives and develops as part of nature, values the diversity of life, takes no more than can be replenished and leaves to future generations a nurturing and dynamic world, rich in biodiversity. (Canadian Biodiversity Strategy)
Mission: Working together to sustain Canada’s natural assets and enrich the lives of Canadians.
What
Conservation And Use OutcomesHealthy and Diverse Ecosystems
Viable Populations of Species
Genetic Resources and Adaptive Potential
Sustainable Use of Biological Resources

Why
Benefits For PeopleClean air, water and soil and provision of ecological services essential for human well-beingSustainable yield of food and fibre
Cultural, aesthetic, spiritual and recreational valuesNew food varieties, pharma- ceuticals, bioenergy
Increased production, and resistance to pests and diseaseHealthy, prosperous communities, sustainable livelihoods, traditional lifestyles
How
Management OutcomesAssess
Plan
Do
TrackResearch and information support planning and decision-making
Biodiversity outcomes integrated into land, water and resource management plans in a participatory manner
Informed and enabled implementation
Monitoring and reporting systems support continuous improvement
Biodiversity Outcomes
What We Want to Achieve
- Healthy and Diverse Ecosystems: Reducing human impacts and restoring damaged ecosystems enhance the productivity and resilience of our ecosystems, and preserve the goods and services essential to our well-being.
- Viable Populations of Species: Maintaining the structure and function of ecosystems requires the full complement of native species. Conservation at the ecosystem level sustains most species, but special efforts are needed for some.
- Genetic Resources and Adaptive Potential Maintained: Genetic diversity is nature’s insurance policy. It makes increased production, assures ecological resilience and creates options for future innovation.
- Sustainable Use of Biological Resources: Ecologically sustainable production and consumption of natural resources assure stable jobs, traditional lifestyles, long-term food security and human health.
Biodiversity Outcomes Framework:
Focus on the “What”
What
Conservation And Use Outcomes
Healthy and Diverse Ecosystems
Viable Populations of Species
Genetic Resources and Adaptive Potential
Sustainable Use of Biological Resources

Productive, resilient, diverse ecosystems with the capacity to recover and adapt
Damaged ecosystems restoredFull complement of native species, required for maintenance of ecosystem function
Improved status of species at risk
No new species extinctions due to human activity
Species assemblages maintained in their ecological regionsFull complement of genetic diversity of all species in situ and ex situ (domestic and wild)
Geographic distribution of species necessary to ensure adaptive potentialProduction and consumption of natural resources within ecological limits and thresholds to support economic capacity, livelihoods, local food security and human health
Availability of local and Indigenous knowledge, innovations and practices associated with ecosystems, species and genetic resources
How We Will Get There: Using an Ecosystem and Adaptive Management Approach to Achieve Shared Outcomes
In an ecosystem approach, ecological goals are considered at the same time as economic and social goals. It places the trade-offs front and centre when decisions are being made.
Adaptive management is a cyclical process of taking stock, planning and decision-making, followed by implementation and tracking to see whether management responses to problems improve over time based on new knowledge and better information.
Management Outcomes: The "How"

A Commitment toEngage Canadians
in Achieving Shared Outcomes
Moving to a more outcomes-based approach that more directly engages Canadians will be an incremental process that requires input from everyone. Governments are committed to taking the lead in these efforts by providing Canadians with the opportunity to:
- develop a deeper understanding of the value of biodiversity and the role that natural systems play in keeping our communities safe and healthy, sustaining jobs and traditional lifestyles, and creating options and opportunities for the future.
- receive and access information on the state of Canada’s forests, farmlands, oceans, inland waters and arctic ecosystems.
- become partners in developing and achieving the long-term vision and goals for the natural communities that keep this country healthy and prosperous.