I'm tired of the hegemony of the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
At this point, I think it's actually hampering biodiversity conservation and research.
Yes, it helped tremendously in the past. But not anymore. Here's why:
1/ First, it is flawed.
The categories and criteria are more than 30 years old. They have not aged gracefully. They were conceived before GIS advances, remote sensing. Some simplistic assumptions are used, no use of inference, etc.
2/
The solution? The Red List needs to be updated.
You know, version 2.0. But from the start. No little adjustments. A rethinking of the entire categories and criteria is more than warranted.