In recognition of the need to conserve a healthy sagebrush ecosystem to provide for the long-term conservation of its inhabitants, the US Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) has made updates to the Conservation Efforts Database (CED), to serve as a tool designed to capture the unprecedented conservation efforts occurring within this ecosystem, not only for its most famous resident, the greater sage-grouse but for the other species that rely on sagebrush for all or part of its life. This database has been revised from the greater sage-grouse Conservation Efforts Database (CED v1.0) which was used to collect the combination of voluntary, incentive -based efforts, habitat restoration projects, and management through regulatory mechanisms for evaluation in previous status reviews for the greater sage-grouses. The Service has made a commitment to make these adjustments to reflect our shift, a nd the shift of many of our conservation partners, to an ecosystem based approach to conservation, as well as to be adaptable and make changes in the future based on release of new science and information that informs effective conservation. The Service will work collaboratively with its partners to identify new information to collect and how to utilize it as we gain new insight on links between conservation efforts and biological responses to sagebrush habitats as well as resources values for particular species.