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Change in terrestrial human footprint drives continued loss of intact ecosystems

Authors :
Rajeev Pillay
Hedley S. Grantham
James E. M. Watson
Anne L. S. Virnig
Christina Supples
Jamison Ervin
Jose A. Rehbein
Brooke Williams
Andrew J. Hansen
James Allan
Michelle Ward
Scott J. Goetz
Scott C. Atkinson
Moreno Di Marco
Oscar Venter
Patrick Jantz
Susana Rodríguez-Buriticá
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

SummaryOur ability to map humanity’s influence across Earth has evolved, thanks to powerful computing, a network of earth observing satellites, and new bottom-up census and crowd-sourced data. Here, we provide the latest temporally inter-comparable maps of the terrestrial Human Footprint, and assessment of change in human pressure at global, biome, and ecoregional scales. In 2013, 42% of terrestrial Earth could be considered relatively free of anthropogenic disturbance, and 25% could be classed as ‘wilderness’ (the least degraded end of the human footprint spectrum). Between 2000 and 2013, 1.9 million km2 - an area the size of Mexico - of land relatively free of human disturbance became highly modified. The majority of this occurred within tropical and subtropical grasslands, savannah, and shrubland ecosystems, but the rainforests of Southeast Asia also underwent rapid modification. Our results show that humanity’s footprint is eroding Earth’s last intact ecosystems, and greater efforts are urgently needed to retain them.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....97ae29ae0043a26ee7d940b1745a16cf
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.05.04.077818