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Spatial patterns of agricultural expansion determine impacts on biodiversity and carbon storage
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- National Academy of Sciences, 2015.
-
Abstract
- The agricultural expansion and intensification required to meet growing food and agri-based product demand present important challenges to future levels and management of biodiversity and ecosystem services. Influential actors such as corporations, governments, and multilateral organizations have made commitments to meeting future agricultural demand sustainably and preserving critical ecosystems. Current approaches to predicting the impacts of agricultural expansion involve calculation of total land conversion and assessment of the impacts on biodiversity or ecosystem services on a per-area basis, generally assuming a linear relationship between impact and land area. However, the impacts of continuing land development are often not linear and can vary considerably with spatial configuration. We demonstrate what could be gained by spatially explicit analysis of agricultural expansion at a large scale compared with the simple measure of total area converted, with a focus on the impacts on biodiversity and carbon storage. Using simple modeling approaches for two regions of Brazil, we find that for the same amount of land conversion, the declines in biodiversity and carbon storage can vary two- to fourfold depending on the spatial pattern of conversion. Impacts increase most rapidly in the earliest stages of agricultural expansion and are more pronounced in scenarios where conversion occurs in forest interiors compared with expansion into forests from their edges. This study reveals the importance of spatially explicit information in the assessment of land-use change impacts and for future land management and conservation.
- Subjects :
- Carbon Sequestration
Conservation of Natural Resources
Multidisciplinary
business.industry
Environmental resource management
Land management
Biodiversity
Agriculture
Environment
Models, Theoretical
Ecosystem services
Geography
Deforestation
Sustainability
Spatial ecology
Land development
business
Nature as Capital PNAS 100th Anniversary Special Feature
Brazil
Ecosystem
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9f49c1816f70f1ff3c77a4ac60182f0f