To Bend the Curve of Terrestrial Biodiversity, Place Agency Centre Stage

Leclère et al.1 have outlined the possibility of a biodiversity transition for the 21st century, a line of thinking equivalent to the Forest Transition theory and what it says about forest cover globally2. The authors use a suite of global models to explore the impacts on global biodiversity...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Garcia, C., Savilaakso, S., Sassen, M., Stoudmann, N., Verburg, R.W., Quétier, F., Araújo, M.B., Bastin, J., Boutinot, L., Dessard, H., Dray, A., Fernbach, P., Francisco, S., Ghazoul, J., Feintrenie, L., Naimi, B., Oszwald, J., Pietsch, S.A., Robinson, B.E., Sist, P., Sloman, S.A., Sunderland, T.C.H., Vermeulen, C., Wilmé, L., Wilson, S.J., Waeber, Patrick O.
Formato: Preprint
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/112761
Descripción
Sumario:Leclère et al.1 have outlined the possibility of a biodiversity transition for the 21st century, a line of thinking equivalent to the Forest Transition theory and what it says about forest cover globally2. The authors use a suite of global models to explore the impacts on global biodiversity of interventions on land-use, consumption and production patterns. They outline six strategies that have the potential to stop the downfall of global terrestrial biodiversity by 2050 and redress it to a pre-1970 level by 2100. Although robust, sophisticated and well-illustrated, the conclusions of this paper cannot alone be used to frame a post-2020 biodiversity strategy.