We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Managing the middle: A shift in conservation priorities based on the global human modification gradient.
- Authors
Kennedy, Christina M.; Oakleaf, James R.; Theobald, David M.; Baruch‐Mordo, Sharon; Kiesecker, Joseph
- Abstract
An increasing number of international initiatives aim to reconcile development with conservation. Crucial to successful implementation of these initiatives is a comprehensive understanding of the current ecological condition of landscapes and their spatial distributions. Here, we provide a cumulative measure of human modification of terrestrial lands based on modeling the physical extents of 13 anthropogenic stressors and their estimated impacts using spatially explicit global datasets with a median year of 2016. We quantified the degree of land modification and the amount and spatial configuration of low modified lands (i.e., natural areas relatively free from human alteration) across all ecoregions and biomes. We identified that fewer unmodified lands remain than previously reported and that most of the world is in a state of intermediate modification, with 52% of ecoregions classified as moderately modified. Given that these moderately modified ecoregions fall within critical land use thresholds, we propose that they warrant elevated attention and require proactive spatial planning to maintain biodiversity and ecosystem function before important environmental values are lost. Several international initiatives aim to balance development with conservation goals, which requires a comprehensive understanding of the current ecological condition of landscapes. We quantified the spatial extent and pattern of human land modification using a cumulative measure of 13 anthropogenic stressors with median year of 2016. We identified that fewer unmodified lands remain than previously reported and that most of the world's ecoregions fall at critical land modification thresholds, thus, warrant timely conservation attention.
- Subjects
CONSERVATION of natural resources; HUMAN ecology; LAND use &; the environment; ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature; ECOLOGICAL regions; SUSTAINABLE Development Goals (United Nations)
- Publication
Global Change Biology, 2019, Vol 25, Issue 3, p811
- ISSN
1354-1013
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/gcb.14549