7,093 results
Search Results
2. Implications of deep‐seabed mining on marine ecosystems—Introduction to a special series of papers.
- Author
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Gilron, Guy and Smith, Samantha
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OCEAN mining ,MARINE ecology ,ENVIRONMENTAL ethics ,ENVIRONMENTAL management ,CLEAN energy ,BIODIVERSITY ,ECOSYSTEM services - Abstract
After more than 50 years of exploration and research that has intensified over the past decade, deep‐seabed mining (DSM) remains a controversial subject, resulting mainly from legacy issues of other extractive industries. Moreover, our planet is environmentally challenged, with climate change as one of the major issues that we collectively face. Deep‐seabed mining aims to collect metal resources lying on the deep seabed to help meet increased global demand caused by growth in population and urbanization, and clean energy, in a way that reduces pressures on land, such as deforestation and community relocation. The metals found on the seabed are those needed to address climate change through clean energy technologies. An important question facing us is: How do we, most responsibly, obtain the metals we need with the least impact on the planet we are trying to protect? DSM is one of the options to meet the demand. In this IEAM special series, we set out to present neutral and unbiased perspectives on the environmental implications of DSM. Our aim is to offer readers environmental management considerations learned by researchers around the world and working in diverse aspects of the field, including: population and community assessment, biota ecosystem services, environmental ethics, and rehabilitation and restoration. In consideration of the controversies, fundamental questions still remain: How can a new industry be given the opportunity to "do the right thing"? How do we make evidence‐based decisions about where metals should come from when emotions and possibly fear often seem to drive the debate? Can we assume that decisions and policies are best achieved based on data and evidence? The papers presented in the series help address these questions and cover a range of diverse topics from ethical frameworks to biodiversity assessment to risk assessment to restoration. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2022;18:631–633. © 2021 SETAC Key Points: Deep seabed mining (DSM) is one of the options to meet the demand for metals globally.This special series presents neutral and unbiased perspectives on the environmental implications of DSM.Fundamental questions remain: can a new industry be given the opportunity to "do the right thing"; how do evidence‐based decisions about where metals should come from be made, when emotions and fear often drive the debate, and can we assume that decisions and policies are best achieved based on data and evidence.Papers presented in the special series help address key questions and cover a range of diverse topics from ethical frameworks to biodiversity assessment to risk assessment to restoration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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3. Estimating local biodiversity change: a critique of papers claiming no net loss of local diversity.
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GONZALEZ, ANDREW, CARDINALE, BRADLEY J., ALLINGTON, GINGER R. H., BYRNES, JARRETT, ENDSLEY, K. ARTHUR, BROWN, DANIEL G., HOOPER, DAVID U., ISBELL, FOREST, O'CONNOR, MARY I., and LOREAU, MICHEL
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BIODIVERSITY monitoring , *BIOLOGICAL extinction , *SPECIES diversity , *BIODIVERSITY , *META-analysis - Abstract
Global species extinction rates are orders of magnitude above the background rate documented in the fossil record. However, recent data syntheses have found mixed evidence for patterns of net species loss at local spatial scales. For example, two recent data meta-analyses have found that species richness is decreasing in some locations and is increasing in others. When these trends are combined, these papers argued there has been no net change in species richness, and suggested this pattern is globally representative of biodiversity change at local scales. Here we reanalyze results of these data syntheses and outline why this conclusion is unfounded. First, we show the datasets collated for these syntheses are spatially biased and not representative of the spatial distribution of species richness or the distribution of many primary drivers of biodiversity change. This casts doubt that their results are representative of global patterns. Second, we argue that detecting the trend in local species richness is very difficult with short time series and can lead to biased estimates of change. Reanalyses of the data detected a signal of study duration on biodiversity change, indicating net biodiversity loss is most apparent in studies of longer duration. Third, estimates of species richness change can be biased if species gains during post-disturbance recovery are included without also including species losses that occurred during the disturbance. Net species gains or losses should be assessed with respect to common baselines or reference communities. Ultimately, we need a globally coordinated effort to monitor biodiversity so that we can estimate and attribute human impacts as causes of biodiversity change. A combination of technologies will be needed to produce regularly updated global datasets of local biodiversity change to guide future policy. At this time the conclusion that there is no net change in local species richness is not the consensus state of knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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4. Call for emergency action to limit global temperature increases, restore biodiversity, and protect health.
- Author
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Atwoli L, Baqui AH, Benfield T, Bosurgi R, Godlee F, Hancocks S, Horton R, Laybourn-Langton L, Monteiro CA, Norman I, Patrick K, Praities N, Rikkert MGMO, Rubin EJ, Sahni P, Smith R, Talley N, Turale S, and Vázquez D
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- Humans, Temperature, Biodiversity
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- 2021
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5. Contributed Papers The Threat of Transformation: Quantifying the Vulnerability of Grasslands in South Africa.
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NEKE, KIRSTEN S. and DU PLESSIS, MORNÉ A.
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GRASSLANDS , *GRASSLAND conservation , *ECOLOGY , *LAND use , *CONSERVATION of natural resources - Abstract
The ability to predict which areas of conservation importance are most vulnerable to transformation and to rank the relative damage that transforming land uses could cause to biodiversity are important components of an effective and realistic conservation planning process. We used the South African grassland biome as a case study to illustrate the assessment of vulnerability to land-use transformation through the construction of a “threat map.” We identified the dominant transforming land uses and created suitability models based on area appropriateness for each. Land uses were scored according to their expected relative impacts on biodiversity, with a framework that included compositional, structural, and functional components. This information, once combined, resulted in a map that highlighted the areas most vulnerable to transformation in terms of the likelihood of their transformation and the impact on their biodiversity. We propose that such an analysis of the threat of transformation, in combination with species-representation approaches, will aid the integration of conservation planning theory and decision making. This approach can be applied at any scale and in any region with a robustness and accuracy dependent on data quality, resultant suitability models, and comprehension of how land uses affect an area's biodiversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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6. Contributed Papers Significance of Specimen Databases from Taxonomic Revisions for Estimating and Mapping the Global Species Diversity of Invertebrates and Repatriating Reliable Specimen Data.
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MEIER, RUDOLF and DIKOW, TORSTEN
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SPECIES diversity , *INVERTEBRATES , *BIODIVERSITY , *TAXONOMY , *ANIMALS , *INVERTEBRATE populations - Abstract
We argue that the millions of specimen-label records published over the past decades in thousands of taxonomic revisions are a cost-effective source of information of critical importance for incorporating invertebrates into biodiversity research and conservation decisions. More specifically, we demonstrate for a specimen database assembled during a revision of the robber-fly genus Euscelidia (Asilidae, Diptera) how nonparametric species richness estimators (Chao1, incidence-based coverage estimator, second-order jackknife) can be used to (1) estimate global species diversity, (2) direct future collecting to areas that are undersampled and/or likely to be rich in new species, and (3) assess whether the plant-based global biodiversity hotspots of contain a significant proportion of invertebrates. During the revision of Euscelidia , the number of known species more than doubled, but estimation of species richness revealed that the true diversity of the genus was likely twice as high. The same techniques applied to subsamples of the data indicated that much of the unknown diversity will be found in the Oriental region. Assessing the validity of biodiversity hotspots for invertebrates is a formidable challenge because it is difficult to decide whether species are hotspot endemics, and lists of observed species dramatically underestimate true diversity. Lastly, conservation biologists need a specimen database analogous to GenBank for collecting specimen records. Such a database has a three-fold advantage over information obtained from digitized museum collections: (1) it is shown for Euscelidia that a large proportion of unrevised museum specimens are misidentified; (2) only the specimen lists in revisionary studies cover a wide variety of private and public collections; and (3) obtaining specimen records from revisions is cost-effective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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7. Contributed Papers Distribution of Bird Diversity in a Vulnerable Neotropical Landscape.
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ROBINSON, W. DOUGLAS, ANGEHR, GEORGE R., ROBINSON, TARA R., PETIT, LISA J., PETIT, DANIEL R., and BRAWN, JEFFREY D.
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ANIMAL diversity , *BIRD populations , *ZOOGEOGRAPHY , *FOREST birds ,BARRO Colorado Nature Monument (Panama) - Abstract
Recent withdrawal of the U.S. military from the Republic of Panama has exposed 64,000 ha of lowland forest in the former Canal Zone to possible development. The forests form a 16-km-wide strip reaching 65 km from the Caribbean Sea to the Pacific Ocean and function as the water supply for the canal and as home to one of the world's richest terrestrial biotas. We present an overview of the distribution of bird diversity in the forests of the canal area based on 10 years of inventories. A total of 498 terrestrial species has been recorded, of which 177 occur only in lowland forests. More species reside in Caribbean- than in Pacific-slope forests and in the largest forest tracts. The Panamanian government, recognizing the importance of the forests for protection of biodiversity and for proper functioning of the canal, has created two national parks and a national monument in the canal area. One large park, Soberania National Park, currently contains 92% of the region's forest-dwelling species. Two large tracts on the Caribbean coast, the Achiote Road forest and the Fort Sherman forest, are not designated as national parks but are recognized as important forest areas. Those two forests harbor species found nowhere else in the canal corridor. Extensive fragmentation, disconnection of forested corridors between foothills and lowlands, and anthropogenic degradation of forests near towns have altered regional bird-community dynamics. Some dynamics occur on large spatial scales, such as the poorly understood movements of elevational and transisthmian migrants. Long-term maintenance of bird species diversity in the canal area will require preservation of the large forest tracts and reestablishment of a forested connection from the canal corridor lowlands to the Chagres lowlands and foothills in the east. Such conservation activities will be challenging to execute given the region's growing human population and desires for a stronger national economy. We recommend protection of remaining forests and active enforcement of protection laws to reduce hunting and further intrusions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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8. RESEARCH PAPER Local-regional relationships and the geographical distribution of species.
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Arita, Hector T. and Rodriguez, Pilar
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BIODIVERSITY , *SPECIES , *MAMMALS , *ECOLOGY , *BIOLOGY - Abstract
Local-regional (LR) species diversity plots were conceived to assess the contribution of regional and local processes in shaping the patterns of biological diversity, but have been used also to explore the scaling of diversity in terms of its alpha, beta, and gamma components. Here we explore the idea that patterns in the geographical ranges of species over a continent can determine the shape of small region to large region (SRLR) plots, which are equivalent to LR plots when comparing the diversity of sites at two regional scales. To test that idea, we analysed the diversity patterns at two regional scales for the mammals of North America, defined as the mainland from Alaska and Canada to Panama. We developed a theoretical model relating average range size of species over a large-scale region with its average regional point species diversity (RPD). Then, we generated a null model of expected SRLR plots based on theoretical predictions. Species diversities at two scales were modelled using linear and saturation functions for Type I and Type II SRLR relationships, respectively. We applied the models to the case of North American mammals by examining the regional diversity and the RPD for 21 large-scale quadrats (with area equal to 160,000 km2), arranged along a latitudinal gradient. Our model showed that continental and large-scale regional patterns of distribution of species can generate both types of SRLR relationship, and that these patterns can be reflected in LR plots without invoking any kind of local processes. We found that North American nonvolant mammals follow a Type I SRLR relationship, whereas bats follow a Type II pattern. This difference was linked to patterns in which species of the two mammalian groups distribute in geographical space. Traditional LR plots and the new SRLR plots are useful tools in exploring the scaling of species diversity and in showing the relationship between distribution and diversity. Their usefulness in comparing the relative role of local and regional processes is, however, very limited. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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9. RESEARCH PAPER From sampling stations to archipelagos: investigating aspects of the assemblage of insular biota.
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Sfenthourakis, Spyros, Giokas, Sinos, and Tzanatos, Evangelos
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ISOPODA , *HABITATS , *BIODIVERSITY , *ISLANDS - Abstract
To investigate the formation of nestedness and species co-occurrence patterns at the local (sampling station), the intermediate (island group), and the archipelago scale. The study used data on the distribution of terrestrial isopods on 20 islands of the central Aegean (Greece). These islands are assigned to two distinct subgroups (Kyklades and Eastern islands). The Nestedness Temperature Calculator was used to obtain nestedness values and maximally nested matrices, the EcoSim7 software and a modified version of ) method were used for the analysis of species co-occurrences. Idiosyncratic temperatures of species and the order of species placement in the maximally nested matrices were used for further comparisons among spatial scales. The relationships of nestedness values with beta-diversity, habitat diversity and a number of ecological factors recorded for each sampling station were also investigated. Significant nestedness was found at all spatial scales. Levels of nestedness were not related to beta-diversity or habitat diversity. Nestedness values were similar among spatial scales, but they were affected by matrix size. The species that contributed most to the nested patterns within single islands were not the same as those that produce nestedness at the archipelago scale. There was significant variation in the frequency of species occurrence among islands and among spatial scales. There was no direct effect of ecological factors on the shaping of patterns of nestedness within individual islands, but habitat heterogeneity was crucial for the existence of such patterns. Positive associations among species prevailed at all scales when species per station were considered, while negative associations prevailed in the species per island matrices. All associations resulted from the habitat structure of sampling stations and from particularities of geographical distributions. There was no clear-cut distinction between nestedness patterns among spatial scales, even though different species, and partially different factors, contributed to the formation of these patterns in each case. There was a core of species that contributed to the formation of nested patterns at all spatial scales, while the patterns of species associations suggested that biotic interactions are not an important causal factor. The results of this study suggest that locally rare species cannot be widespread at a higher spatial scale, while locally common species can have a restricted distribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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10. RESEARCH PAPER Relative influences of current and historical factors on mammal and bird diversity patterns in deglaciated North America.
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Hawkins, Bradford A. and Porter, Eric E.
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BIODIVERSITY , *MAMMALS , *BIRDS , *GLOBAL warming - Abstract
To investigate the relative contributions of current vs. historical factors in explaining broad-scale diversity gradients using a combination of contemporary factors and a quantitative estimate of the temporal accessibility of areas for recolonization created by glacial retreat following the most recent Ice Age. The part of the Nearctic region of North America that was covered by ice sheets during the glacial maximum 20 000 BP. We used range maps to estimate the species richness of mammals and terrestrial birds in 48 400 km2 cells. Current conditions in each cell were quantified using seven climatic and topographical variables. Historical conditions were estimated using the number of years before present when an area became exposed as the ice sheets retreated during the post-Pleistocene climate warming. We attempted to tease apart contemporary and historical effects using multiple regression, partial regression and spatial autocorrelation analysis. A measure of current energy inputs, potential evapotranspiration, explained 76–82% of the variance in species richness, but time since deglaciation explained an additional 8–13% of the variance, primarily due to effects operating at large spatial scales. Because of spatial covariation between the historical climates influencing the melting of the ice sheet and current climates, it was not possible to partition their effects fully, but of the independent effects that could be identified, current climate explained two to seven times more variance in richness patterns than age. Factors acting in the present appear to have the strongest influence on the diversity gradient, but an historical signal persisting at least 13 000 years is still detectable. This has implications for modelling changes in diversity patterns in response to future global warming. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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11. RESEARCH PAPER Are there latitudinal gradients in species turnover?
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Koleff, Patricia, Lennon, Jack J., and Gaston, Kevin J.
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OWLS , *BIODIVERSITY , *SPECIES , *BIOGEOGRAPHY - Abstract
To examine the effect on the observed relationship between spatial turnover and latitude of both the measure of beta diversity used and the method of analysis. The empirical analyses presented herein are for the New World. We take the spatial distributions of the owls of the New World as an exemplar data set to investigate the patterns of beta diversity across latitudes revealed by different analytical methods. To illustrate the strengths and weaknesses of alternative measures of beta diversity and different analytical approaches, we also use a simple random distribution model, focusing in particular on the influence of richness gradients and landmass geometry. Our simple spatial model of turnover demonstrates that different combinations of analytical approach and measure of beta diversity can give rise to strikingly different relationships between turnover and latitude. The analyses of the bird data for the owls of the New World demonstrate that this observation extends to real data. For the particular assemblage considered, we present strong evidence that species richness declines at higher latitudes, and there is also some evidence that species turnover is greater nearer the equator, despite conceptual and practical difficulties involved in analysing spatial patterns of species turnover. We suggest some ways of overcoming these difficulties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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12. Conservation biological control research is strongly uneven across trophic levels and economic measures.
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Johnson, Anne C, Liu, Jian, Reynolds, Olivia, Furlong, Michael J, Mo, Jianhua, Rizvi, Syed, and Gurr, Geoff M
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BIOLOGICAL pest control ,FOOD chains ,ECONOMIC impact - Abstract
Conservation biological control suppresses pests by promoting established rather than inoculative or mass released natural enemies. Research in this approach has expanded rapidly this century but uptake remains limited. Why? Most of the 150 peer reviewed papers reporting field experiments include results on natural enemies and/or pests. Only a minority report effects on crop damage levels or yield, and very few consider economic consequences. This is despite evidence for potential benefits across this full spectrum of response variables. We argue that the limited scope of work to date constrains the development of a compelling evidence base to demonstrate the field effectiveness of conservation biological control, hampering its uptake so encourage researchers to include the assessment of economic impact in future studies of conservation biological control. © 2020 Society of Chemical Industry [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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13. Importance of timely metadata curation to the global surveillance of genetic diversity.
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Crandall, Eric D., Toczydlowski, Rachel H., Liggins, Libby, Holmes, Ann E., Ghoojaei, Maryam, Gaither, Michelle R., Wham, Briana E., Pritt, Andrea L., Noble, Cory, Anderson, Tanner J., Barton, Randi L., Berg, Justin T., Beskid, Sofia G., Delgado, Alonso, Farrell, Emily, Himmelsbach, Nan, Queeno, Samantha R., Trinh, Thienthanh, Weyand, Courtney, and Bentley, Andrew
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GENETIC variation ,METADATA ,SPECIES diversity ,NUCLEOTIDE sequence ,AGE groups ,INDIGENOUS peoples - Abstract
Copyright of Conservation Biology is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
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14. Climate change and the biodiversity of alpine ponds: Challenges and perspectives.
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Lamouille‐Hébert, Marie, Arthaud, Florent, and Datry, Thibault
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BODIES of water ,PONDS ,CLIMATE change models ,LITERATURE reviews ,BIODIVERSITY ,EVIDENCE gaps ,CLIMATE change ,BIOMES - Abstract
Inland waters are among the most threatened biodiversity hotspots. Ponds located in alpine areas are experiencing more rapid and dramatic water temperature increases than any other biome. Despite their prevalence, alpine ponds and their biodiversity responses to climate change have been poorly explored, reflecting their small size and difficult access. To understand the effects of climate change on alpine pond biodiversity, we performed a comprehensive literature review for papers published since 1955. Through analysis of their geographic distribution, environmental features, and biodiversity values, we identified which environmental factors related to climate change would have direct or indirect effects on alpine pond biodiversity. We then synthesized this information to produce a conceptual model of the effects of climate change on alpine pond biodiversity. Increased water temperature, reduced hydroperiod, and loss of connectivity between alpine ponds were the main drivers of biodiversity geographic distribution, leading to predictable changes in spatial patterns of biodiversity. We identified three major research gaps that, if addressed, can guide conservation and restoration strategies for alpine ponds biodiversity in an uncertain future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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15. Overcoming confusion and stigma in habitat fragmentation research.
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Riva, Federico, Koper, Nicola, and Fahrig, Lenore
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- *
FRAGMENTED landscapes , *HABITAT conservation , *ECOSYSTEM management , *BIODIVERSITY conservation , *ENVIRONMENTAL sciences , *BIODIVERSITY , *ECOSYSTEMS - Abstract
Anthropogenic habitat loss is widely recognized as a primary environmental concern. By contrast, debates on the effects of habitat fragmentation persist. To facilitate overcoming these debates, here we: (i) review the state of the literature on habitat fragmentation, finding widespread confusion and stigma; (ii) identify consequences of this for biodiversity conservation and ecosystem management; and (iii) suggest ways in which research can move forward to resolve these problems. Confusion is evident from the 25 most‐cited fragmentation articles published between 2017 and 2021. These articles use five distinct concepts of habitat fragmentation, only one of which clearly distinguishes habitat fragmentation from habitat area and other factors ('fragmentation per se'). Stigmatization is evident from our new findings that fragmentation papers are more charged with negative sentiments when compared to papers from other subfields in the environmental sciences, and that fragmentation papers with more negative sentiments are cited more. While most empirical studies of habitat fragmentation per se find neutral or positive effects on species and biodiversity outcomes, which implies that small habitat patches have a high cumulative value, confusion and stigma in reporting and discussing such results have led to suboptimal habitat protection policy. For example, government agencies, conservation organizations, and land trusts impose minimum habitat patch sizes on habitat protection. Given the high cumulative value of small patches, such policies mean that many opportunities for conservation are being missed. Our review highlights the importance of reducing confusion and stigma in habitat fragmentation research. To this end, we propose implementing study designs in which multiple sample landscapes are selected across independent gradients of habitat amount and fragmentation, measured as patch density. We show that such designs are possible for forest habitat across Earth's biomes. As such study designs are adopted, and as language becomes more precise, we expect that confusion and stigma in habitat fragmentation research will dissipate. We also expect important breakthroughs in understanding the situations where effects of habitat fragmentation per se are neutral, positive, or negative, and the reasons for these differences. Ultimately this will improve efficacy of area‐based conservation policies, to the benefit of biodiversity and people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. The importance of understanding the multiple dimensions of power in stakeholder participation for effective biodiversity conservation.
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Lécuyer, L., Balian, E., Butler, J. R. A., Barnaud, C., Calla, S., Locatelli, B., Newig, J., Pettit, J., Pound, D., Quétier, F., Salvatori, V., Von Korff, Y., and Young, J. C.
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SCIENTIFIC knowledge ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,COMPUTER performance ,POWER (Social sciences) ,STAKEHOLDER analysis - Abstract
Copyright of People & Nature is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Old meets new: Innovative and evolving uses of herbaria over time as revealed by a literature review.
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Marín‐Rodulfo, Macarena, Rondinel‐Mendoza, Katy V., Martín‐Girela, Isabel, Cañadas, Eva M., and Lorite, Juan
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- *
LITERATURE reviews , *BOTANICAL specimens , *HERBARIA , *SCIENTIFIC literature , *ENDANGERED plants , *PLANT diversity - Abstract
Societal Impact Statement Summary Herbaria, as collections of preserved plants, contain large amounts of data both in the labels and the specimens themselves, which can be applied in different study fields. A literature review was conducted to discover how the uses of herbaria have evolved over time since records began. This analysis revealed insights into how herbaria are presently used. Uses include traditional taxonomic review, as well as advanced technological tools, which are being applied to herbaria material to address societal and global challenges and therefore contribute to decision‐making in conservation.Herbaria as collections of preserved plants contain large amounts of data and prominent information, both on the labels and on the specimens themselves. There are 400 million specimens preserved in herbaria worldwide, with great potential for studies in conservation and effects of global change on plants. (1) In this paper, we investigate the array of herbaria uses through a systematic review of the scientific literature in SCOPUS covering the period 1842–2022. (2) We reviewed a total of 2900 papers and classified them in different areas of knowledge, as well as the taxonomic level studied. (3) Our results show that taxonomic use is the most relevant over time. This taxonomic use, together with the use as primary source of plant diversity data, is essential for documenting, planning, and acting on the conservation of threatened plants. Furthermore, our results have shown that new and diverse uses have emerged since 1990, mostly related to ecological issues, as herbaria provide a historical record of plant diversity and distribution, as well as their ecological and evolutionary responses, allowing scientists to track changes over time. (4) This contributes to improve the knowledge of biodiversity and to increase the effectiveness of conservation strategies and policies, which are a priority to address on going global change. Therefore, our study shows the relevance and potential of herbaria in ecology, including new or forthcoming uses, which are different from the uses originally intended by collectors. Thus, their preservation is critical as the unique and exceptional record for the knowledge of changes in biodiversity over space and time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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18. SNAPSHOT USA 2021: A third coordinated national camera trap survey of the United States.
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Shamon, Hila, Maor, Roi, Cove, Michael V., Kays, Roland, Adley, Jessie, Alexander, Peter D., Allen, David N., Allen, Maximilian L., Appel, Cara L., Barr, Evan, Barthelmess, Erika L., Baruzzi, Carolina, Bashaw, Kelli, Bastille‐Rousseau, Guillaume, Baugh, Madison E., Belant, Jerrold, Benson, John F., Bespoyasny, Bethany A., Bird, Tori, and Bogan, Daniel A.
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- *
SPECIFIC gravity , *LAND cover , *CLIMATE change , *CAMERAS , *ECOLOGICAL regions - Abstract
SNAPSHOT USA is a multicontributor, long‐term camera trap survey designed to survey mammals across the United States. Participants are recruited through community networks and directly through a website application (https://www.snapshot-usa.org/). The growing Snapshot dataset is useful, for example, for tracking wildlife population responses to land use, land cover, and climate changes across spatial and temporal scales. Here we present the SNAPSHOT USA 2021 dataset, the third national camera trap survey across the US. Data were collected across 109 camera trap arrays and included 1711 camera sites. The total effort equaled 71,519 camera trap nights and resulted in 172,507 sequences of animal observations. Sampling effort varied among camera trap arrays, with a minimum of 126 camera trap nights, a maximum of 3355 nights, a median 546 nights, and a mean 656 ± 431 nights. This third dataset comprises 51 camera trap arrays that were surveyed during 2019, 2020, and 2021, along with 71 camera trap arrays that were surveyed in 2020 and 2021. All raw data and accompanying metadata are stored on Wildlife Insights (https://www.wildlifeinsights.org/), and are publicly available upon acceptance of the data papers. SNAPSHOT USA aims to sample multiple ecoregions in the United States with adequate representation of each ecoregion according to its relative size. Currently, the relative density of camera trap arrays varies by an order of magnitude for the various ecoregions (0.22–5.9 arrays per 100,000 km2), emphasizing the need to increase sampling effort by further recruiting and retaining contributors. There are no copyright restrictions on these data. We request that authors cite this paper when using these data, or a subset of these data, for publication. Any use of trade, firm, or product names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the US Government. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. The changing faces of soil organic matter research.
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Smith, P., Lutfalla, S., Riley, W. J., Torn, M. S., Schmidt, M. W. I., and Soussana, J.‐F.
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HUMUS ,SOIL fertility ,CLIMATE change ,BIODIVERSITY ,CARBON sequestration - Abstract
Summary: For the 70th Anniversary of the establishment of the British Society of Soil Science, this short paper explores the idea that research on soil organic matter has remained a central theme within soil science over the past 70 years, albeit with changing emphasis and application. The number of publications on soil organic matter has increased greatly in recent decades; for example, there were almost 35 000 journal papers with this theme in the decade 2007–2016. Several topics in research on soil organic matter, such as soil fertility, have endured for a number of decades, with publications found on soil organic matter and fertility in the decade 1947–1956. A search with other keywords occurring with soil, such as climate change, biodiversity, fertility, quality, health and security, showed that several topics did not appear before the 1970s and 1980s, but since then the sub‐topics and applications have diversified. Carbon is a keyword that has become more associated with publications on soil organic matter; carbon is in over half of soil organic matter publications of the last decade. A closer examination of research on agricultural soil carbon sequestration since 1990 reveals that the focus of papers in the literature has changed over this period. A closer examination of papers on modelling shows that the next generation of soil organic matter models is developing from pseudo first‐order decay models using conceptual pools and prescribed controls of turnover time to vertically resolved, microbially explicit models representing mineral surface and plant interactions. Given its higher policy profile during the last 2 years, research on soil organic matter and soil carbon sequestration is predicted to have a bright future. Highlights: The number of publications on soil organic matter has increased greatly in recent decades. Soil fertility research has endured for many decades, whereas other topics have diversified. Soil organic matter has been increasingly associated with carbon, which has changed the focus of papers since 1990. Expanding policy attention to soil organic matter research during the last 2 years suggests a bright future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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20. Ecological connectivity research in urban areas.
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LaPoint, Scott, Balkenhol, Niko, Hale, James, Sadler, Jonathan, Ree, Rodney, and Evans, Karl
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CITIES & towns ,ECOLOGY ,ECOSYSTEM dynamics ,ECOSYSTEM management ,BIOTIC communities - Abstract
The successful movement of individuals is fundamental to life. Facilitating these movements by promoting ecological connectivity has become a central theme in ecology and conservation. Urban areas contain more than half of the world's human population, and their potential to support biodiversity and to connect their citizens to nature is increasingly recognized. Promoting ecological connectivity within these areas is essential to reaching this potential. However, our current understanding of ecological connectivity within urban areas appears limited., We reviewed the published scientific literature to assess the state-of-the-art of ecological connectivity research in urban areas, summarized trends in study attributes and highlighted knowledge gaps., We found 174 papers that investigated ecological connectivity within urban areas. These papers addressed either structural (48) or functional connectivity (111), and some addressed both (15), but contained substantial geographic and taxonomic biases. These papers rarely defined the aspect of connectivity they were investigating and objective descriptions of the local urban context were uncommon. Formulated hypotheses or a priori predictions were typically unstated and many papers used suboptimal study designs and methods., We suggest future studies explicitly consider and quantify the landscape within their analyses and make greater use of available and rapidly developing tools and methods for measuring functional connectivity (e.g. biotelemetry or landscape genetics). We also highlight the need for studies to clearly define how the terms ' urban' and ' connectivity' have been applied., Knowledge gaps in ecological connectivity in urban areas remain, partly because the field is still in its infancy and partly because we must better capitalize on the state-of-the-art technological and analytical techniques that are increasingly available. Well-designed studies that employed high-resolution data and powerful analytical techniques highlight our abilities to quantify ecological connectivity in urban areas. These studies are exemplary, setting the standards for future research to facilitate data-driven and evidence-based biodiversity-friendly infrastructure planning in urban areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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21. Ecosystem restoration in India during the United Nations decade on ecosystem restoration: the way forward.
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Singh, Kripal, Abhilash, Purushothaman C., Maiti, Subodh Kumar, and Venkataraman, Ramesh
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RESTORATION ecology ,LAND degradation - Abstract
This article introduces the special section on "Ecosystem Restoration in India: Status Quo and the Way Forward to Achieve Land Degradation Neutrality" and provides an overview of the four papers that constitute this section. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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22. Does Group Model Building Work? Evidence from and Comments on the Paper by Videira et al.
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Rouwette, Etiënne A. J. A.
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MARITIME management ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ECOLOGICAL systems theory ,BIODIVERSITY ,NATURAL resources ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation - Abstract
The author reflects on the usage of causal loop diagram in interpretation of variables in determination of problems in sustainable maritime development. He discusses the need to use natural resources in a sustainable manner so as to minimize degradation of ecological systems. An overview of negative impact of maritime degradation on loss of biodiversity that will have deteriorating effect on humans is also discussed.
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- 2012
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23. What was hot at the fourth World Fisheries Congress?
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Chuenpagdee, Ratana and Bundy, Alida
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CONFERENCES & conventions ,INTELLECTUAL cooperation ,FISHERIES ,FISH conservation ,BIODIVERSITY ,NATURAL history ,ENDANGERED species ,ECOLOGY ,RESEARCH - Abstract
Given the current crisis in global fisheries, how well are we doing at managing fisheries? This short paper describes as summarises the results of a systematic assessment of the scientific papers presented at the Fourth World Fisheries Congress, the theme of which was ’Reconciling fisheries with conservation’. Over 200 papers were presented, 70% of which were based on natural sciences, focusing on issues such as biodiversity, species at risk, resiliency, ecosystem modelling, and ecosystem indicators. Encouragingly, over 60% of the papers scored medium to high for their potential contribution to reconciling fisheries with conservation. However, although the human dimensions of fisheries were recognized, few studies involved stakeholders beyond their roles of objects to study. Communication of scientific research findings, particularly to the general public, was notably absent and emphasised as one of the key challenges in achieving sustainability and in reconciling fisheries with conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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24. The Ne/N ratio in applied conservation.
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Waples, Robin S.
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SEX reversal ,CENSUS ,BIOLOGICAL fitness ,BIODIVERSITY ,GENETIC drift ,INBREEDING ,INSECT reproduction - Abstract
Recent developments within the IUCN and the Convention on Biological Diversity have affirmed the increasingly key role that effective population size (Ne) and the effective size: census size ratio (Ne/N) play in applied conservation and management of global biodiversity. This paper reviews and synthesizes information regarding the definition of Ne and demographic and genetic methods for estimating effective size, census size, and their ratio. Emphasis is on single‐generation estimates of contemporary Ne/N, which are the most informative for practical applications. It is crucial to clearly define which individuals are included in the census size (N). Defining N as the number of adults alive at a given time facilitates comparisons across species. For a wide range of applications and experimental designs, inbreeding Ne is simpler to calculate and interpret than variance Ne. Effects of skewed sex ratio are generally modest, so most reductions to Ne/N arise from overdispersed (greater‐than‐Poisson) variance in offspring number (σk2$$ {\sigma}_k^2 $$). Even when fecundity changes with age, overdispersed within‐age variance generally contributes most to overall σk2$$ {\sigma}_k^2 $$, and both random and deterministic (mediated by selection) factors can be important. Most species are age‐structured, so it is important to distinguish between effective size per generation (Ne) and the effective number of breeders in one season or year (Nb). Both Ne and Nb are important for applied conservation and management. For iteroparous species, a key metric is variance in lifetime reproductive success (σk•2$$ {\sigma}_{k\bullet}^2 $$), which can be affected by a variety of additional factors, including variation in longevity, skip or intermittent breeding, and persistent individual differences in reproductive success. Additional factors that can be important for some species are also discussed, including mating systems, population structure, sex reversal, reproductive compensation, captive propagation, and delayed maturity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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25. Distributional ecology: Opening new research windows by addressing aggregation‐related puzzles.
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Chen, Youhua and Shen, Tsung‐Jen
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SPECIES distribution ,HISTORICAL literature ,PUZZLES ,ECOLOGISTS ,MODELS & modelmaking ,BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
Aim: Distribution of species is one of the most elementary but fundamental biodiversity patterns, yet too many puzzles remain unsolved. In most cases, distribution of species is not random, but presents some degree of aggregation. Accordingly, the term 'distributional aggregation' is prevailingly used in ecology and evolutionary biology to reflect the non‐random distribution characteristic of species in space and time. However, its meanings are multiform and can be decomposed into a variety of components. Location: Global. Methods: In this paper, through synthesizing historical literature and comparing relevant meanings of distributional aggregation under different contexts, we summarize the current statistical metrics in detecting and evaluating distributional aggregation that are suitable for different field‐survey methods, study models and sampling scales. In particular, we explore the concept under the multi‐species setting for which few conceptual advances and statistical methods have been developed. Results: We propose pure data dispersion and spatiotemporal proximity, as two basic components of distributional aggregation. We further explore three advanced components of distributional aggregation: orthogonal, hierarchical and parallel components that can simultaneously link sampling taxa, sampling sites and sampling methods. Main Conclusions: We hope the systematic review can serve as a potentially useful primer to ecologists for better understanding and investigating complex and new distributional patterns of biological diversity. We further provide informative guides on developing new statistical methods and metrics. We also discuss useful simulation algorithms for generating diverse distributional aggregation patterns of species, aiming to help ecologists to test and compare the performance of different metrics related to diversity and distribution patterns of species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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26. Realizing "30 × 30" in India: The potential, the challenges, and the way forward.
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Sengupta, Asmita, Bhan, Manan, Bhatia, Saloni, Joshi, Atul, Kuriakose, Shyama, and Seshadri, K. S.
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BIODIVERSITY monitoring ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,DEVELOPING countries ,PROTECTED areas ,BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
Of the goals and targets specified by the Kunming‐Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, Target 3, often referred to as "30 × 30," has garnered widespread attention globally. In this paper, we critique India's potential to meet this target. We find that with its vast network of ecosystems that are under some form of protection and through the recognition of other effective area‐based conservation measures sites, India has the potential to meet the quantitative target of conserving and managing at least 30% of its area by 2030. However, the qualitative attributes of the target might be more difficult to realize owing to several challenges, such as inadequate landscape connectivity, insufficient representation of habitats in the current protected area model, and the exacerbation of socioeconomic vulnerabilities of resource‐dependent communities. To achieve strategic, inclusive, and equitable conservation, we suggest a four‐pronged approach involving landscape‐level biodiversity conservation, socially just and collaborative safeguarding of biodiversity, and relevant policy (re)formulation, informed and underlain by long‐term research and impact monitoring. Although we focus on India, the issues we discuss are of broader relevance, especially for countries across the Global South that are also likely to be significantly impacted by the implementation of the target. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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27. Call for Papers.
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- *
NATURAL resources , *SUSTAINABLE development , *BIODIVERSITY , *FORESTS & forestry , *BIOTECHNOLOGY - Abstract
The article announces that "Natural Resources Forum; A United Nations Sustainable Development Journal," a quarterly journal issued by the Division for Sustainable Development of the United Nations, is calling for papers for a new series on the themes of the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development at its 2012-2014 sessions. Topics include forests, biodiversity, and biotechnology. Additional information about the submission of articles is provided.
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- 2014
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28. Land‐use change and biodiversity: Challenges for assembling evidence on the greatest threat to nature.
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Davison, Charles W., Rahbek, Carsten, and Morueta‐Holme, Naia
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ENDANGERED species ,ECOSYSTEM health ,RESEARCH methodology ,VITAL statistics ,WILDLIFE conservation ,BIODIVERSITY ,SPECIES diversity - Abstract
Land‐use change is considered the greatest threat to nature, having caused worldwide declines in the abundance, diversity, and health of species and ecosystems. Despite increasing research on this global change driver, there are still challenges to forming an effective synthesis. The estimated impact of land‐use change on biodiversity can depend on location, research methods, and taxonomic focus, with recent global meta‐analyses reaching disparate conclusions. Here, we critically appraise this research body and our ability to reach a reliable consensus. We employ named entity recognition to analyze more than 4000 abstracts, alongside full reading of 100 randomly selected papers. We highlight the broad range of study designs and methodologies used; the most common being local space‐for‐time comparisons that classify land use in situ. Species metrics including abundance, distribution, and diversity were measured more frequently than complex responses such as demography, vital rates, and behavior. We identified taxonomic biases, with vertebrates well represented while detritivores were largely missing. Omitting this group may hinder our understanding of how land‐use change affects ecosystem feedback. Research was heavily biased toward temperate forested biomes in North America and Europe, with warmer regions being acutely underrepresented despite offering potential insights into the future effects of land‐use change under novel climates. Various land‐use histories were covered, although more research in understudied regions including Africa and the Middle East is required to capture regional differences in the form of current and historical land‐use practices. Failure to address these challenges will impede our global understanding of land‐use change impacts on biodiversity, limit the reliability of future projections and have repercussions for the conservation of threatened species. Beyond identifying literature biases, we highlight the research priorities and data gaps that need urgent attention and offer perspectives on how to move forward. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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29. CamTrapAsia: A dataset of tropical forest vertebrate communities from 239 camera trapping studies.
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Mendes, Calebe P., Albert, Wido R., Amir, Zachary, Ancrenaz, Marc, Ash, Eric, Azhar, Badrul, Bernard, Henry, Brodie, Jedediah, Bruce, Tom, Carr, Elliot, Clements, Gopalasamy Reuben, Davies, Glyn, Deere, Nicolas J., Dinata, Yoan, Donnelly, Christl A., Duangchantrasiri, Somphot, Fredriksson, Gabriella, Goossens, Benoit, Granados, Alys, and Hearn, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
TROPICAL forests , *SCIENTIFIC literature , *COMMUNITY forests , *BIOTIC communities , *APPLIED ecology - Abstract
Information on tropical Asian vertebrates has traditionally been sparse, particularly when it comes to cryptic species inhabiting the dense forests of the region. Vertebrate populations are declining globally due to land‐use change and hunting, the latter frequently referred as "defaunation." This is especially true in tropical Asia where there is extensive land‐use change and high human densities. Robust monitoring requires that large volumes of vertebrate population data be made available for use by the scientific and applied communities. Camera traps have emerged as an effective, non‐invasive, widespread, and common approach to surveying vertebrates in their natural habitats. However, camera‐derived datasets remain scattered across a wide array of sources, including published scientific literature, gray literature, and unpublished works, making it challenging for researchers to harness the full potential of cameras for ecology, conservation, and management. In response, we collated and standardized observations from 239 camera trap studies conducted in tropical Asia. There were 278,260 independent records of 371 distinct species, comprising 232 mammals, 132 birds, and seven reptiles. The total trapping effort accumulated in this data paper consisted of 876,606 trap nights, distributed among Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Bhutan, Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Nepal, and far eastern India. The relatively standardized deployment methods in the region provide a consistent, reliable, and rich count data set relative to other large‐scale pressence‐only data sets, such as the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) or citizen science repositories (e.g., iNaturalist), and is thus most similar to eBird. To facilitate the use of these data, we also provide mammalian species trait information and 13 environmental covariates calculated at three spatial scales around the camera survey centroids (within 10‐, 20‐, and 30‐km buffers). We will update the dataset to include broader coverage of temperate Asia and add newer surveys and covariates as they become available. This dataset unlocks immense opportunities for single‐species ecological or conservation studies as well as applied ecology, community ecology, and macroecology investigations. The data are fully available to the public for utilization and research. Please cite this data paper when utilizing the data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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30. Risky business: Protecting nature, protecting wealth?
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Irvine‐Broque, Audrey and Dempsey, Jessica
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ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,BIODIVERSITY ,CHANGE theory ,ECOSYSTEMS ,TASK forces ,FINANCIAL risk ,ECOSYSTEM services - Abstract
Finance is a precondition for many of the activities that harm ecosystems, but how to address this underlying driver of biodiversity loss remains a topic of debate. This paper reviews the Task Force on Nature‐Related Financial Disclosures (TNFD), a corporate‐led effort that aims to identify how changes to biodiversity may create financial risks for companies and investors. This approach is also promoted as a strategy for managing the impact of business on biodiversity, with the assumption that risk disclosure will more effectively price biodiversity‐harming activities. We assess the potential of the TNFD toward this end, and invite conservation scientists, practitioners, and policymakers to engage critically with its theory of change. We find that the relationship between disclosing biodiversity risk and redirecting finance away from environmental degradation is tenuous and unproven, making this mechanism insufficient for addressing the impact of the financial sector on nature. We question the embrace of another industry‐led mechanism that implies that a lack of information is the greatest barrier to stopping biodiversity loss. Further, there are risks that this financial sector approach to biodiversity will reinforce the highly unequal concentration of power and wealth, which is itself inimical to transformative change, as called for by the Intergovernmental Science–Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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31. Biodiversity dataset of vascular plants and birds in Chinese urban greenspace.
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Wang, Xin, Liu, Jun, Liang, Chenxia, Zhao, Zhichun, Feng, Gang, and Zhang, Jian
- Subjects
VASCULAR plants ,URBAN biodiversity ,BIODIVERSITY ,PLANT species ,URBAN research ,URBAN plants ,ECOSYSTEMS - Abstract
Urban greenspace plays an important role in buffering the threat of urbanization to biodiversity. Biodiversity research in urban greenspace is essential for understanding the impacts of human activities on biodiversity and the associated ecosystem functioning and services in urban ecosystems. However, we lack large‐scale biodiversity datasets in urban greenspace for macroecological studies. In this paper, we provided a comprehensive biodiversity dataset of vascular plant and bird species in 286 university campuses and 118 urban parks in 143 cities in China, covering a wide range with different levels of urbanization (20–50°N in latitude and 81–130°E in longitude). Plant species were classified into different growth forms, and bird species were identified as resident or migrant. In total, the dataset contains 46,558 occurrence records for 5,915 plant species (about 18% of all Chinese vascular plant species) and 6,423 records for 546 bird species (around 40% of all recorded bird species in China). This dataset provides an important data source for evaluating the anthropogenic effects of biodiversity changes and advancing urban ecology. The complete data set for this abstract published in the Data Paper section of the journal is available in electronic format in MetaCat in JaLTER at http://db.cger.nies.go.jp/JaLTER/metacat/metacat/ERDP-2021-02.1/jalter-en. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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32. Call for Papers.
- Subjects
- *
SUSTAINABLE development , *BIODIVERSITY , *TOURISM - Abstract
A call for papers on a new series on the themes of the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development including biodiversity, tourism, and biotechnology is presented.
- Published
- 2012
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33. Lomborg and the Litany of Biodiversity Crisis: What the Peer‐Reviewed Literature Says.
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BINI, LUIS MAURICIO, ALEXANDRE, JOSÉ, DINIZ‐FILHO, FELIZOLA, CARVALHO, PRISCILLA, PINTO, MIRIAM PLAZA, and RANGEL, THIAGO FERNANDO L. V. B.
- Abstract
Copyright of Conservation Biology is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2005
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34. Spatial–temporal changes of landscape and habitat quality in typical ecologically fragile areas of western China over the past 40 years: A case study of the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region.
- Author
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Wang, Ding, Hao, Haiguang, Liu, Hao, Sun, Lihui, and Li, Yuyang
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LANDSCAPE changes ,CONSERVATION of natural resources ,ECOSYSTEMS ,FRAGMENTED landscapes ,BIODIVERSITY ,RESTORATION ecology ,HABITAT conservation - Abstract
In this paper, we use the InVEST model and five periods of land use data from 1980 to 2020 to assess the habitat quality of the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region in Western China, which has characteristics of a typical fragile ecosystem. We further analyse the spatial and temporal characteristics of habitat quality evolution and its relationship with land use and landscape pattern indices to explore the close relationship between regional habitat quality changes and human natural resource conservation and utilization. The research results show that the overall habitat quality of Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region was stable and at a moderate level (0.57–0.60) during the 40 years from 1980 to 2020; Habitat patches (2020) with low (24.89%), high (22.45%) and very high (29.81%) quality occupy a larger proportion of the area, followed by very low (13.31%) and moderate levels (9.54%). Over the past 40 years, there have been 275 sample sites in Ningxia where habitat quality has deteriorated, 1593 sample sites where the habitat quality has remained stable, and 184 sample sites where the habitat quality has increased. From 1980 to 2020, the Mean Patch Area of landscape types in Ningxia decreased by 25.9 hm2. The Patch Density increased by 0.06 /hm2. The Largest Patch Index decreased by 15.69%. The Edge Density increased by 2.5 m/hm2. The Contagion Index decreased by 2.99%. The Area‐Weighted Mean Patch Fractal Dimension remained basically unchanged (0.01). The Landscape Shape Index showed a trend of first increasing and then decreasing, increasing by 13.94. The Area‐Weighted Mean Shape Index has been reduced by 9.45. The Shannon Diversity Index and Shannon Evenness Index both show an increasing trend, but the amplitude is relatively small, with 0.09 and 0.04, respectively. There was a significant spatial aggregation of high and low habitat quality in Ningxia, with high values usually distributed in the northern and southern areas with good natural conditions and low values distributed in areas with frequent human activities and poor natural conditions. The decrease in habitat quality in Ningxia was mainly due to the expansion of cultivated land and construction land, the increase in landscape fragmentation and the resulting decrease in connectivity. On the other hand, due to the implementation of ecological protection measures, such as the project of returning farmland to pasture and grass to forest, the quality of habitats in Ningxia increased. The conclusions of this study support the idea that the conservation of habitat quality in ecologically fragile areas should fully preserve the original natural habitats and reduce the interference of human activities to increase the habitat suitability of the landscape and the habitat connectivity between patches. At the same time, targeted ecological protection policies should be developed to restore the areas where the habitat quality has been damaged and ultimately maintain the stability of biodiversity and ecosystems in ecologically fragile areas. Meanwhile, for ecologically fragile areas with similar ecological characteristics to those of Ningxia, our research supports the idea of increasing the protection of the stability of the original habitats, increasing the proportion of ecological restoration projects, financial investment and seeking cooperation with local community managers and residents will help to improve the quality of the regional habitats and the enrichment of the biodiversity, and ultimately promote the harmonious coexistence of human beings and nature in the modernized sense of the word. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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35. How do different types and characteristics of green space impact mental health? A scoping review.
- Author
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Beute, F., Marselle, M. R., Olszewska‐Guizzo, A., Andreucci, M. B., Lammel, A., Davies, Z. G., Glanville, J., Keune, H., O'Brien, L., Remmen, R., Russo, A., and de Vries, S.
- Subjects
MENTAL health ,NATURE conservation ,FOREST reserves ,LONGITUDINAL method ,EVIDENCE gaps ,PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
Green space matters for mental health but is under constant pressure in an increasingly urbanising world. Often there is little space available in cities for green areas, so it is vital to optimise the design and usage of these available green spaces. To achieve this, experts in planning, design and nature conservation need to know which types and characteristics of green spaces are most beneficial for residents' mental health.A scoping review of studies that compare different green space types and characteristics on mental health was conducted. A total of 215 (experimental, observational and qualitative) papers were included in the scoping review.This review highlights a high level of heterogeneity in study design, geographical locations, mental health outcomes and green space measures. Few of the included studies were specifically designed to enable direct comparisons between green space types and characteristics (e.g. between parks and forests). The included studies have predominantly experimental research designs looking at the effects of short‐term exposure to green space on short‐term mental health outcomes (e.g. affect and physiological stress). More studies enabled only indirect comparisons, either within the same study or between different studies.Analysis of the direction of the mental health outcomes (positive, neutral, negative) from exposure to various types and characteristics of green space found positive (i.e. beneficial) effects across all green space types. However, green space characteristics did appear to render more diverse effects on mental health, which is especially the case for vegetation characteristics (e.g. higher vegetation density can be negative for mental health).The scoping review reveals gaps in the present evidence base, with a specific need for more studies directly comparing green space types and characteristics within the same study. Proposed future research directions include the use of longitudinal research designs focusing on green space characteristics, considering actual exposure and systematically addressing heterogeneity in factors influencing the relation between green spaces and mental health (e.g. type of interaction, user experience). Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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36. Saproxylic beetles' morphological traits and higher trophic guilds indicate boreal forest naturalness.
- Author
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Wetherbee, Ross, Birkemoe, Tone, Burner, Ryan C., and Sverdrup‐Thygeson, Anne
- Subjects
TAIGAS ,SPECIES diversity ,BEETLES ,BIODIVERSITY ,BIODIVERSITY monitoring ,FOREST biodiversity ,FOREST management - Abstract
Forests contribute to numerous ecosystem functions and services and contain a large proportion of terrestrial biodiversity, but they are being negatively impaced by anthropogenic activities. Forests that have never been clear‐cut and have old growth characteristics, termed "near‐natural," often harbor different and richer species assemblages than managed forests. Alternative management strategies may be able to balance the needs of biodiversity with the demands of forestry, but evaluation efforts are limited by the challenges of measuring biodiversity. Species richness is frequently used as a simple measure of biodiversity, but research indicates that it may not adequately capture community‐level changes. Alternatively, trait‐based measures of biodiversity may prove to be useful, but research is lacking. In this paper, we use a large dataset that includes 339 obligate saproxylic beetle species collected over a decade in the boreal region throughout southern Norway to: (1) establish if there is a difference in beetle community composition between near‐natural and managed forests; and (2) determine which measures of beetle biodiversity best indicate forest naturalness. We arranged the sites in an ordination space and tested for differences in community composition between these forest types. We also tested different measures of biodiversity to determine which were the most predictive of forest naturalness. We found a clear difference in community composition between near‐natural and managed forests. Additionally, three measures of biodiversity were most predictive of forest naturalness: proportional abundance of predators, community weighted mean (CWM) of wing length, and CWM of body roundness. The probability that a forest was near‐natural increased with the proportional abundance of predators but decreased with CWM wing length and body roundness. Although species richness was higher in near‐natural forests, the effect was not significant. Overall, our findings underscore the conservation value of near‐natural forests and highlight the potential of several measures of biodiversity for determining forest quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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37. Earth System's Gatekeeping of "One Health" Approach to Manage Climate‐Sensitive Infectious Diseases.
- Author
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Dovie, Delali B. K., Miyittah, Michael K., Dodor, Daniel E., Dzodzomenyo, Mawuli, Christian, Aaron K., Tete‐Larbi, Reuben, Codjoe, Samuel N. A., and Bawah, Ayaga A.
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,EARTH system science ,MEDICAL climatology ,EMERGING infectious diseases ,LAND-atmosphere interactions ,CLIMATOLOGY - Abstract
Global response to climate‐sensitive infectious diseases has been uncertain and slow. The understanding of the underlying vulnerabilities which forms part of changes created by forces within the Earth system has never before been critical until the coronavirus disease 2019, "COVID‐19" pandemic with the initial developmental phase linked to weather elements and climate change. Hence, the heightened interest in climate‐sensitive infectious diseases and GeoHealth, evident in the renewed calls for "One Health" approach to disease management. "One Health" explains the commonality of human and animal medicine, and links to the bio‐geophysical environment, yet are at crossroads with how forces within the Earth system shape etiologies, incidences, and transmission dynamics of infectious diseases. Hence, the paper explores how these forces, which are multistage and driven by climate change impacts on ecosystems affect emerging infectious diseases, leading to the question "what drive the drivers of diseases?" Three questions that challenge broad theories of Earth system science on boundaries and connectivity emerged to guide study designs to further interrogating disease surveillance and health early warning systems. This is because, climate change (a) drives prevailing biological health hazards as part of forces within the Earth system, (b) shifts disease control services of ecosystems and functioning to effectively regulate disease incidence, and (c) modifies pathogen—species hosts relationships. Hence, the need to rethink pluralistic concepts of climate‐sensitive diseases in their infection and management from a GeoHealth perspective, which "One Health" potentially conveys, and to also maintain ecosystem health. Plain Language Summary: Climate change, an Earth system process (forces deep inside the earth that bring about adjustments) is considered the greatest threat to human health in the twenty‐first century. Climate change has been linked to shifts in ecosystem processes, services and interactions that affect how many organisms thrive including those causing diseases. Yet, how climate change influences specific processes between air, land, life, and water on earth to ultimately affect diseases is still emerging. Collectively partly defined as GeoHealth, it has become topical amidst the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) pandemic. Thus, its origin partly links to changes in land‐atmosphere interactions. Hence, the paper poses questions to better appreciate how climate change influence forces within the Earth system to subsequently impact infectious diseases and management in a holistic approach called "One Health," which GeoHealth is positioned to contribute to. Thus, "One Health" provides pathways to environmentally safeguard and sustain ecosystem health and human well‐being. Key Points: Earth system science of ecosystems and climate change hardly tells mechanisms of disease‐causing organisms, detection, and managementRevisiting "One Health" amidst "coronavirus disease 2019" is opportune pathway for GeoHealth's influence of climate‐sensitive infectious diseasesModern Earth system science of climate context of "One Health" is key to maintaining human well‐being and ecosystem integrity [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A synthetic review of terrestrial biological research from the Alberta oil sands region: 10 years of published literature.
- Author
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Roberts, David R., Bayne, Erin M., Beausoleil, Danielle, Dennett, Jacqueline, Fisher, Jason T., Hazewinkel, Roderick O., Sayanda, Diogo, Wyatt, Faye, and Dubé, Monique G.
- Subjects
OIL sands ,GAS well drilling ,SPATIAL orientation ,GEOSPATIAL data ,ENVIRONMENTAL toxicology - Abstract
In the past decade, a large volume of peer‐reviewed papers has examined the potential impacts of oil and gas resource extraction in the Canadian oil sands (OS). A large proportion focuses on terrestrial biology: wildlife, birds, and vegetation. We provide a qualitative synthesis of the condition of the environment in the oil sands region (OSR) from 2009 to 2020 to identify gaps and progress cumulative effects assessments. Our objectives were to (1) qualitatively synthesize and critically review knowledge from the OSR; (2) identify consistent trends and generalizable conclusions; and (3) pinpoint gaps in need of greater monitoring or research effort. We visualize knowledge and terrestrial monitoring foci by allocating papers to a conceptual model for the OS. Despite a recent increase in publications, focus has remained concentrated on a few key stressors, especially landscape disturbance, and a few taxa of interest. Stressor and response monitoring is well represented, but direct monitoring of pathways (linkages between stressors and responses) is limited. Important knowledge gaps include understanding effects at multiple spatial scales, mammal health effects monitoring, focused monitoring of local resources important to Indigenous communities, and geospatial coverage and availability, including higher attribute resolution in human footprint, comprehensive land cover mapping, and up‐to‐date LiDAR coverage. Causal attribution based on spatial proximity to operations or spatial orientation of monitoring in the region is common but may be limited in the strength of inference that it provides. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2022;18:388–406. © 2021 The Authors. Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society of Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry (SETAC). KEY POINTS: We provide a qualitative synthesis of the condition of the environment in the Canadian oil sands region (OSR) in northeastern Alberta from 2009 to 2020 to identify gaps and progress cumulative effects assessments. Despite a recent increase in publications, focus has remained concentrated on a few key stressors and a few taxa of interest, for which monitoring is well represented, though direct monitoring of pathways (linkages between stressors and responses) is limited. Important gaps include a lack of understanding of effects at multiple spatial scales, a lack of focused monitoring of local resources important to Indigenous communities, and geospatial data resolution and availability. Causal attribution based on spatial proximity to oil sands operations or spatial orientation of monitoring in the OSR is common but may be limited in the strength of inference that it provides. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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39. Nine years of the Red Book Challenge conservation education in Southern Madagascar: What we have learned.
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Walker‐Bolton, Amber D.
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PRESERVATION of books ,COLORING books ,VOLUNTEER service ,SUPPLEMENTARY education ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Red Book Challenge Conservation Education Madagascar is a small‐scale, arts‐based, conservation education initiative founded in 2012 by two Lemur catta researchers working in the Berenty Reserve and incorporated as a nonprofit organization in 2022. The target demographic is children and adults living in Southern Madagascar. The Red Book Challenge program initially consisted of providing supplementary conservation education through classroom visits at the elementary schools in Berenty village. The school children created small conservation booklets with red covers, giving the project its name. Today, the program has expanded to include the village of Besakoa Ambany and the city of Fort Dauphin, while remaining a small‐scale program. To date, the Red Book Challenge has completed seven outreach projects aimed at generating goodwill in the local community, community development, and conservation education. This retrospective analysis functions as a formative evaluation of the feasibility of future projects. This paper will focus on four projects that fall under the category of conservation education: (1) Using films to promote conservation topics (2) field trips to observe lemurs (3) a Malagasy‐run conservation club, and (4) a coloring book. These projects have been funded through small grants from the International Conservation Fund of Canada, and private donations. This paper includes the Red Book Challenge's history, results from the participant surveys, and the successes and failures in each stage of our work. Six shifts in thinking occurred: (1) use of Malagasy talent to create educational conservation films (2) more formal assessment before and after field trips (3) improvement of recruitment, training and supervision of staff to keep the conservation club self‐sufficient (4) enlistment of Malagasy illustrators and adaptation of environmentally friendly printing practices for the coloring books (5) disseminate study outcomes to international community though publication (6) reframe the program from spare‐time volunteer work to full‐time research work. Research Highlights: Positive and negative results of our operation of a small primate conservation education program as secondary to our academic research are reported with the aim of encouraging primatologists to thoughtfully take up conservation education or make their current programs a priority.Young people who participated in a field trip to see lemurs for the first time had their misconceptions about lemurs eliminated by the experience.Of 70 school children in three locations in Southern Madagascar who received our coloring books, 84% stated that they were very likely to share what they had learned from the book with their family. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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40. Fast, scalable, and automated identification of articles for biodiversity and macroecological datasets.
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Cornford, Richard, Deinet, Stefanie, De Palma, Adriana, Hill, Samantha L. L., McRae, Louise, Pettit, Benjamin, Marconi, Valentina, Purvis, Andy, Freeman, Robin, and Peres‐Neto, Pedro
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CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks ,ARTIFICIAL neural networks ,ENVIRONMENTAL databases ,BIODIVERSITY ,SIGNAL convolution ,CLASSIFICATION ,BOTTLENECKS (Manufacturing) - Abstract
Aim: Understanding broad‐scale ecological patterns and processes is necessary if we are to mitigate the consequences of anthropogenically driven biodiversity degradation. However, such analyses require large datasets and current data collation methods can be slow, involving extensive human input. Given rapid and ever‐increasing rates of scientific publication, manually identifying data sources among hundreds of thousands of articles is a significant challenge, which can create a bottleneck in the generation of ecological databases. Innovation: Here, we demonstrate the use of general, text‐classification approaches to identify relevant biodiversity articles. We apply this to two freely available example databases, the Living Planet Database and the database of the PREDICTS (Projecting Responses of Ecological Diversity in Changing Terrestrial Systems) project, both of which underpin important biodiversity indicators. We assess machine‐learning classifiers based on logistic regression (LR) and convolutional neural networks, and identify aspects of the text‐processing workflow that influence classification performance. Main conclusions: Our best classifiers can distinguish relevant from non‐relevant articles with over 90% accuracy. Using readily available abstracts and titles or abstracts alone produces significantly better results than using titles alone. LR and neural network models performed similarly. Crucially, we show that deploying such models on real‐world search results can significantly increase the rate at which potentially relevant papers are recovered compared to a current manual protocol. Furthermore, our results indicate that, given a modest initial sample of 100 relevant papers, high‐performing classifiers could be generated quickly through iteratively updating the training texts based on targeted literature searches. These findings clearly demonstrate the usefulness of text‐mining methods for constructing and enhancing ecological datasets, and wider application of these techniques has the potential to benefit large‐scale analyses more broadly. We provide source code and examples that can be used to create new classifiers for other datasets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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41. Using the Value of Information to improve conservation decision making.
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Bolam, Friederike C., Grainger, Matthew J., Mengersen, Kerrie L., Stewart, Gavin B., Sutherland, William J., Runge, Michael C., and McGowan, Philip J. K.
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BIODIVERSITY conservation ,ADAPTIVE natural resource management ,DECISION making in science ,ENVIRONMENTAL sciences ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Conservation decisions are challenging, not only because they often involve difficult conflicts among outcomes that people value, but because our understanding of the natural world and our effects on it is fraught with uncertainty. Value of Information (VoI) methods provide an approach for understanding and managing uncertainty from the standpoint of the decision maker. These methods are commonly used in other fields (e.g. economics, public health) and are increasingly used in biodiversity conservation. This decision‐analytical approach can identify the best management alternative to select where the effectiveness of interventions is uncertain, and can help to decide when to act and when to delay action until after further research. We review the use of VoI in the environmental domain, reflect on the need for greater uptake of VoI, particularly for strategic conservation planning, and suggest promising areas for new research. We also suggest common reporting standards as a means of increasing the leverage of this powerful tool. The environmental science, ecology and biodiversity categories of the Web of Knowledge were searched using the terms 'Value of Information,' 'Expected Value of Perfect Information,' and the abbreviation 'EVPI.' Google Scholar was searched with the same terms, and additionally the terms decision and biology, biodiversity conservation, fish, or ecology. We identified 1225 papers from these searches. Included studies were limited to those that showed an application of VoI in biodiversity conservation rather than simply describing the method. All examples of use of VOI were summarised regarding the application of VoI, the management objectives, the uncertainties, the models used, how the objectives were measured, and the type of VoI. While the use of VoI appears to be on the increase in biodiversity conservation, the reporting of results is highly variable, which can make it difficult to understand the decision context and which uncertainties were considered. Moreover, it was unclear if, and how, the papers informed management and policy interventions, which is why we suggest a range of reporting standards that would aid the use of VoI. The use of VoI in conservation settings is at an early stage. There are opportunities for broader applications, not only for species‐focussed management problems, but also for setting local or global research priorities for biodiversity conservation, making funding decisions, or designing or improving protected area networks and management. The long‐term benefits of applying VoI methods to biodiversity conservation include a more structured and decision‐focused allocation of resources to research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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42. Collected Papers of Michael E. Soulé. Early Years in Modern Conservation Biology.
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Haynes, Alison
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CONSERVATION biology , *BIODIVERSITY , *NONFICTION - Published
- 2018
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43. Double‐blind peer review—An experiment.
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Fox, Charles W., Thompson, Ken, Knapp, Alan, Ferry, Lara A., Rezende, Enrico L., Aimé, Emilie, and Meyer, Jennifer
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PROFESSIONAL peer review ,BIODIVERSITY ,PERIODICAL publishing ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,META-analysis - Published
- 2019
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44. Assessment of vulnerability to climate change using indicators: a meta-analysis of the literature.
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Tonmoy, Fahim N., El‐Zein, Abbas, and Hinkel, Jochen
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CLIMATE change ,BIODIVERSITY ,ECOSYSTEM health ,PUBLIC health ,WATER quality - Abstract
Climate change vulnerability assessment (CCVA) can inform adaptation policy and help in incorporating climate futures in planning. The literature on CCVA stems from a number of research paradigms (e.g., risk assessment, natural disaster management, and urban planning), therefore making it difficult to extract major directions andmethodologies from this body of work. Alarge number of assessments are based, partly or totally, on indicators which bring up specific methodological problems and constraints. In this study, first, we discuss the most important methodological challenges facing indicator-based vulnerability assessment (IBVA) based on a set of key conceptual papers in the field. Second, we conduct a meta-analysis of a representative sample of peer-reviewed IBVA studies, to identify how current research on IBVA is engaging with these challenges. We attempt to elicit major thematic and methodological trends in this corpus with specific focus on issues related to geographical and temporal scales, aggregation, and nonlinearity. We find that health of ecosystems and biodiversity (28%), freshwater quantity and quality (12%), and public health (10%) have attracted the highest number of studies. Less than a third of the papers in our sample give some consideration to uncertainty and nonlinearity. Assessments typically use aggregation methods that are based on the Multiple Attribute Utility Theory despite the fact that IBVA rarely satisfies the theoretical requirements of this approach. A small percentage of IBVA studies critically scrutinize prevalent assessmentmethodologies or attempt to develop new ones, despite the raised questions in key theoretical papers about its methodological aspects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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45. Food security implications for low‐ and middle‐income countries under agricultural input reduction: The case of the European Union's farm to fork and biodiversity strategies.
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Baquedano, Felix, Jelliffe, Jeremy, Beckman, Jayson, Ivanic, Maros, Zereyesus, Yacob, and Johnson, Michael
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FOOD prices ,LOCAL foods ,MIDDLE-income countries ,FOOD security ,BIODIVERSITY ,PRICE increases - Abstract
Policies that restrict the use of agricultural inputs have been shown to reduce output, farmers' incomes, and increase food prices, which could ultimately lead to more food insecurity. In this paper, we consider the EU Farm to Fork Strategy's proposed reductions of agricultural inputs on food security in 77 low‐ and middle‐income countries under two implementation scenarios: EU‐only and Global. Our findings indicate that compared with the status quo, each scenario results in a net increase in food insecurity, which ranges from 30 million (EU‐only) to 171 million (Global) by 2030. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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46. Bat ecology and conservation in semi‐arid and arid landscapes: a global systematic review.
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Lisón, Fulgencio, Jiménez‐Franco, María V., Altamirano, Adison, Haz, Ángeles, Calvo, José F., and Jones, Gareth
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MAMMAL conservation ,BAT ecology ,BAT conservation ,META-analysis ,ECOLOGY ,SURFACE of the earth - Abstract
Semi‐arid and arid landscapes (dry‐lands) cover 41% of the Earth's land surface over five continents. These areas are home to 55% of mammal species. Bats have the second highest species richness among mammals, and, although many species are adapted to arid conditions, they are particularly sensitive in these habitats and require conservation priority.Information on bats in arid and semi‐arid landscapes is scattered, patchy and focused on small‐scale studies; therefore, we undertook a systematic review using the PRISMA protocol to identify the current knowledge status, detect knowledge gaps and propose future research priorities.We analysed 346 published articles and evaluated 40 topics within five topic categories (taxa studied, methodologies used, biology, ecology and conservation). The most commonly studied topic categories were ecology and biology. However, we found a gap in the topic category conservation (including topics such as conservation status and roost conservation). Our network analysis of topics within the categories showed that most ecology papers were focused on distribution, species richness and habitat use.When we analysed keywords, we found that phylogeny, taxonomy and distribution demonstrated relatively high presence. Moreover, comparison of the percentage of studies conducted in dry‐lands and the percentage of land surface area covered by dry‐lands in the continents revealed that dry‐lands in Africa and Australia were especially under‐represented. Our review shows that knowledge of bats in semi‐arid and arid landscapes is biased towards new records of the distribution of species, as well as covering systematic/taxonomic and morphological aspects of bat biology.We suggest that research on conservation measures and guidelines to protect the bat species found in semi‐arid and arid landscapes should be prioritised, together with the sharing of knowledge with local practitioners and the development of citizen science programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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47. Moving Away from Paper Corridors in Southeast Asia.
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JAIN, ANUJ, CHONG, KWEK YAN, CHUA, MARCUS AIK HWEE, and CLEMENTS, GOPALASAMY REUBEN
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BIODIVERSITY ,FOREST degradation ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,FOREST conversion ,FOREST biodiversity - Abstract
The authors discuss the advantages and disadvantages of corridors as biodiversity conservation solutions. Topics discussed include the impact of poorly implemented corridor, corridors as conservation measures to reduce the negative impacts of forest fragmentation on biodiversity and the Central Forest Spine (CFS) Master Plan for Ecological Linkages from Peninsular Malaysia designed to restore ecological connectivity between 4 fragmented forest complexes through 17 primary linkages or corridors.
- Published
- 2014
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48. Ego versus Alter: Internal and External Perceptions of the EU's Role in Global Environmental Negotiations.
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Delreux, Tom and Pipart, Frauke
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BIODIVERSITY ,INTERNET surveys ,CHEMICAL laws - Abstract
This paper compares how European and non‐European participants in international environmental negotiations perceive the EU's role in such negotiations. Three dimensions of the EU's role (environmental ambition, diplomatic activity and influence) are assessed in three UN‐wide environmental forums (the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Conventions on chemicals, the Convention on Biological Diversity, and the United Nations Environment Assembly). The paper presents original data collected through an online survey with 659 delegates who participated in the negotiations in the three forums in the period 2018–19. Comparing the ego perception of delegates from the EU with the alter view of delegates from non‐EU countries, the paper finds that the ego and alter perceptions of the EU's ambition, diplomatic activities and influence are largely similar. Both ego and alter see the EU as a highly ambitious, active and influential actor in global environmental negotiations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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49. The declines of heterogeneity and stability in diatom communities are associated with human activity.
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Wang, Rong, Zheng, Wenxiu, Xu, Min, and Yang, Hui
- Subjects
BIOTIC communities ,DIATOMS ,BIOLOGICAL extinction ,POPULATION density ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
Anthropogenic forcing caused the biodiversity loss and stability decline of communities. There is still controversy over whether the decline in biodiversity will lead to a decrease in community stability. The stability of biological communities is related to both biodiversity and structure, and this paper aims to reveal the human impacts on diatom communities' biodiversity and structure. We studied the richness, β‐diversity and network distance of diatom communities in Qinghai‐Xizang, Yunnan‐Sichuan and Lower Yangtze River Basin, China through empirical dataset and simulation method. The results showed that the diatoms richness in the Qinghai‐Xizang and the Yunnan‐Sichuan region was lower and the network distance was higher than that of the Lower Yangtze River Basin. β‐diversity in the Lower Yangtze River Basin was the lowest and the diatom network distance responds negatively to human population densities in China. The simulation showed that the network distance kept constant during random species loss, and declined while specialist species were lost or replaced by generalist species. The results suggested diatom communities' homogeneity and stability decline were associated with human activities. Human impacts may cause biodiversity loss targeted to specialist species or no biodiversity loss while generalist species replace those specialist species. This study showed that how diversity changes determined ecological stability depends on the type of species changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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50. An operational workflow for producing periodic estimates of species occupancy at national scales.
- Author
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Boyd, Robin J., August, Thomas A., Cooke, Robert, Logie, Mark, Mancini, Francesca, Powney, Gary D., Roy, David B., Turvey, Katharine, and Isaac, Nick J. B.
- Subjects
- *
NUMBERS of species , *WORKFLOW , *SPECIES distribution , *DATA science , *BIODIVERSITY , *WORKFLOW management , *WORKFLOW management systems - Abstract
Policy makers require high‐level summaries of biodiversity change. However, deriving such summaries from raw biodiversity data is a complex process involving several intermediary stages. In this paper, we describe an operational workflow for generating annual estimates of species occupancy at national scales from raw species occurrence data, which can be used to construct a range of policy‐relevant biodiversity indicators. We describe the workflow in detail: from data acquisition, data assessment and data manipulation, through modelling, model evaluation, application and dissemination. At each stage, we draw on our experience developing and applying the workflow for almost a decade to outline the challenges that analysts might face. These challenges span many areas of ecology, taxonomy, data science, computing and statistics. In our case, the principal output of the workflow is annual estimates of occupancy, with measures of uncertainty, for over 5000 species in each of several defined 'regions' (e.g. countries, protected areas, etc.) of the UK from 1970 to 2019. This data product corresponds closely to the notion of a species distribution Essential Biodiversity Variable (EBV). Throughout the paper, we highlight methodologies that might not be applicable outside of the UK and suggest alternatives. We also highlight areas where the workflow can be improved; in particular, methods are needed to mitigate and communicate the risk of bias arising from the lack of representativeness that is typical of biodiversity data. Finally, we revisit the 'ideal' and 'minimal' criteria for species distribution EBVs laid out in previous contributions and pose some outstanding questions that should be addressed as a matter of priority. Going forward, we hope that this paper acts as a template for research groups around the world seeking to develop similar data products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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