Britain's first proper conservation management system (CMS), which tied objectives to practical interventions with feedback from monitoring outcomes, coalesced around Mike Alexander (Warden of
Skomer Island National Nature Reserve), Tim Read (staff member of the
Joint Nature Conservation Committee) and James Perrins (an environmental/IT graduate of
York University). This initiative in the 1980s led to the setting up of the CMS Consortium
[1] by the UK's main conservation agencies, which produced a
relational database for linking management objectives with scheduled on-site operational inputs. See the CMS website
[2] for more information. The database recorded all actions, particularly the results of monitoring against performance indicators. Over the years the software has improved greatly with respect to the user/screen interface, but the data model is still very much the same as in the original programme, which was produced with '
Advanced Revelation' (Arev). Although the NCC has been replaced by four country agencies, in terms of the widespread uptake of the CMS across the UK, the current version, mounted on MS Access, is now, de facto, a national conservation management system. As its use becomes more widespread CMS plans are beginning to function as an evidence-based library of best practice for exchanging practical know-how between users.