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Global effects of land use on local terrestrial biodiversity.

Authors :
Newbold T
Hudson LN
Hill SL
Contu S
Lysenko I
Senior RA
Börger L
Bennett DJ
Choimes A
Collen B
Day J
De Palma A
Díaz S
Echeverria-Londoño S
Edgar MJ
Feldman A
Garon M
Harrison ML
Alhusseini T
Ingram DJ
Itescu Y
Kattge J
Kemp V
Kirkpatrick L
Kleyer M
Correia DL
Martin CD
Meiri S
Novosolov M
Pan Y
Phillips HR
Purves DW
Robinson A
Simpson J
Tuck SL
Weiher E
White HJ
Ewers RM
Mace GM
Scharlemann JP
Purvis A
Source :
Nature [Nature] 2015 Apr 02; Vol. 520 (7545), pp. 45-50.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Human activities, especially conversion and degradation of habitats, are causing global biodiversity declines. How local ecological assemblages are responding is less clear--a concern given their importance for many ecosystem functions and services. We analysed a terrestrial assemblage database of unprecedented geographic and taxonomic coverage to quantify local biodiversity responses to land use and related changes. Here we show that in the worst-affected habitats, these pressures reduce within-sample species richness by an average of 76.5%, total abundance by 39.5% and rarefaction-based richness by 40.3%. We estimate that, globally, these pressures have already slightly reduced average within-sample richness (by 13.6%), total abundance (10.7%) and rarefaction-based richness (8.1%), with changes showing marked spatial variation. Rapid further losses are predicted under a business-as-usual land-use scenario; within-sample richness is projected to fall by a further 3.4% globally by 2100, with losses concentrated in biodiverse but economically poor countries. Strong mitigation can deliver much more positive biodiversity changes (up to a 1.9% average increase) that are less strongly related to countries' socioeconomic status.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-4687
Volume :
520
Issue :
7545
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25832402
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature14324