The interaction of human population, food production, and biodiversity protection DOI
Eileen Crist, Camilo Mora, Robert Engelman

et al.

Science, Journal Year: 2017, Volume and Issue: 356(6335), P. 260 - 264

Published: April 20, 2017

Research suggests that the scale of human population and current pace its growth contribute substantially to loss biological diversity. Although technological change unequal consumption inextricably mingle with demographic impacts on environment, needs all beings-especially for food-imply projected will undermine protection natural world. Numerous solutions have been proposed boost food production while protecting biodiversity, but alone these proposals are unlikely staunch biodiversity loss. An important approach sustaining well-being is through actions can slow eventually reverse growth: investing in universal access reproductive health services contraceptive technologies, advancing women's education, achieving gender equality.

Language: Английский

Food in the Anthropocene: the EAT–Lancet Commission on healthy diets from sustainable food systems DOI
Walter C. Willett, Johan Rockström, Brent Loken

et al.

The Lancet, Journal Year: 2019, Volume and Issue: 393(10170), P. 447 - 492

Published: Jan. 17, 2019

Language: Английский

Citations

8203

Defaunation in the Anthropocene DOI
Rodolfo Dirzo, Hillary S. Young, Mauro Galetti

et al.

Science, Journal Year: 2014, Volume and Issue: 345(6195), P. 401 - 406

Published: July 24, 2014

We live amid a global wave of anthropogenically driven biodiversity loss: species and population extirpations and, critically, declines in local abundance. Particularly, human impacts on animal are an under-recognized form environmental change. Among terrestrial vertebrates, 322 have become extinct since 1500, populations the remaining show 25% average decline Invertebrate patterns equally dire: 67% monitored 45% mean abundance decline. Such will cascade onto ecosystem functioning well-being. Much remains unknown about this "Anthropocene defaunation"; these knowledge gaps hinder our capacity to predict limit defaunation impacts. Clearly, however, is both pervasive component planet's sixth mass extinction also major driver ecological

Language: Английский

Citations

3656

Global effects of land use on local terrestrial biodiversity DOI
Tim Newbold, Lawrence N. Hudson, Samantha L. L. Hill

et al.

Nature, Journal Year: 2015, Volume and Issue: 520(7545), P. 45 - 50

Published: March 31, 2015

Language: Английский

Citations

3563

Safeguarding human health in the Anthropocene epoch: report of The Rockefeller Foundation–Lancet Commission on planetary health DOI Creative Commons
Sarah Whitmee, Andy Haines, Chris Beyrer

et al.

The Lancet, Journal Year: 2015, Volume and Issue: 386(10007), P. 1973 - 2028

Published: July 16, 2015

Far-reaching changes to the structure and function of Earth's natural systems represent a growing threat human health. And yet, global health has mainly improved as these have gathered pace. What is explanation? As Commission, we are deeply concerned that explanation straightforward sobering: been mortgaging future generations realise economic development gains in present. By unsustainably exploiting nature's resources, civilisation flourished but now risks substantial effects from degradation life support future. Health environment including climatic change, ocean acidification, land degradation, water scarcity, overexploitation fisheries, biodiversity loss pose serious challenges past several decades likely become increasingly dominant during second half this century beyond. These striking trends driven by highly inequitable, inefficient, unsustainable patterns resource consumption technological development, together with population growth. We identify three categories be addressed maintain enhance face harmful environmental trends. Firstly, conceptual empathy failures (imagination challenges), such an over-reliance on gross domestic product measure progress, failure account for harms over present day gains, disproportionate effect those poor developing nations. Secondly, knowledge (research information address social drivers ill health, historical scarcity transdisciplinary research funding, unwillingness or inability deal uncertainty within decision making frameworks. Thirdly, implementation (governance how governments institutions delay recognition responses threats, especially when faced uncertainties, pooled common time lags between action effect. Although better evidence needed underpin appropriate policies than available at present, should not used excuse inaction. Substantial potential exists link reduce damage outcomes nations all levels development. This Commission identifies opportunities six key constituencies: professionals, funders academic community, UN Bretton Woods bodies, governments, investors corporate reporting civil society organisations. Depreciation capital subsidy accounted so economy nature falsely separated. Policies balance sustainability, economy. To world 9–10 billion people more, resilient food agricultural both undernutrition overnutrition, waste, diversify diets, minimise damage. Meeting need modern family planning can improve short term—eg, reduced maternal mortality pressures infrastructure. Planetary offers unprecedented opportunity advocacy national reforms taxes subsidies many sectors economy, energy, agriculture, water, Regional trade treaties act further incorporate protection near long term. Several essential steps taken transform planetary include reduction waste through creation products more durable require less energy materials manufacture often produced present; incentivisation recycling, reuse, repair; substitution hazardous safer alternatives. Key messages1The concept based understanding depend flourishing wise stewardship systems. However, being degraded extent history.2Environmental threats will characterised surprise uncertainty. Our societies clear potent dangers urgent transformative actions protect generations.3The governance organisation inadequate call aid integration social, economic, creation, synthesis, application interdisciplinary strengthen health.4Solutions lie reach redefinition prosperity focus enhancement quality delivery all, respect integrity endeavour necessitate change promoting sustainable equitable consumption, reducing growth, harnessing power technology change. 1The Despite limitations, Sustainable Development Goals provide great integrate sustainability judicious selection relevant indicators wellbeing, enabling infrastructure supporting systems, strong governance. The landscape, ecosystems, they contain managed indirectly, disease risk. Intact restored ecosystems contribute resilience (see panel 1 glossary terms report), example, coastal (eg, wave attenuation) ability floodplains greening river catchments flooding events diverting holding excess water.Panel 1GlossaryHolocene1International StratigraphyInternational stratigraphic chart.http://www.stratigraphy.org/ICSchart/ChronostratChart2013-01.pdfDate: 2013Google ScholarA geological epoch began about 11 700 years ago encompasses most period which humanity grown developed, its written history major civilisations.Anthropocene2Crutzen PJ Geology mankind.Nature. 2002; 415: 23Crossref PubMed Scopus (1931) Google ScholarThe proposed name new demarcated activities Anthropocene yet formally recognised dates put forward mark beginning.Ecosystem3Millennium Ecosystem AssessmentEcosystems wellbeing: synthesis.in: Corvalan C Hales S McMichael AJ Island Press, Washington DC2005Google dynamic complex plant, animal, microorganism communities non-living acting functional unit.Ecosystem services4UKNEAThe UK National Assessment: technical report. United Nations Environment Programme's World Conservation Monitoring Centre, Cambridge, UK2011Google benefits provided possible worth living. Examples ecosystem services clean regulation floods, soil erosion, outbreaks, non-material recreational spiritual areas. term usually encompass tangible intangible beings obtain sometimes separated into goods services.Biodiversity5Millennium AssessmentBiodiversity.in: Mace G Masundire H Baillie J Millennium assessment: current state trends: findings condition working group well-being. Washington, ScholarAn abbreviation biological diversity; means variability among living organisms sources, inter alia, terrestrial, marine, other aquatic ecological complexes part. includes diversity species, ecosystems.Wetland6RamsarConvention wetlands international importance waterfowl habitat 1971. Iran, Feb 2, amended protocol Dec 3, 1982, amendments May 28, 1987.http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=15398&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.htmlGoogle Ramsar Convention defines “areas marsh, fen, peatland whether artificial, permanent temporary, static flowing, fresh, brackish salt, areas marine depth low tide does exceed metres”.Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP)7IPCCClimate 2013. Physical Science Basis Working Group I contribution fifth assessment report Intergovernmental Panel Climate Change. Cambridge University Change, New York, USA2013Google ScholarRCPs trajectories concentrations greenhouse gases atmosphere consistent range emissions. For Fifth Assessment Report scientific community defined set four RCPs. They identified their approximate total radiative forcing (ie, warming effect) year 2100 relative 1750. RCP 8·5 pathway very high gas emissions, emissions line trends.Social–ecological systems8Stockholm Resilience CentreResilience dictionary.http://www.stockholmresilience.org/21/research/what-is-resilience/resilience-dictionary.htmlDate: 2015Google ScholarNatural do exist without cannot totally isolation nature. truly interconnected coevolve across spatial temporal scales.REDD+9UN-REDD ProgrammeAbout REDD+.http://www.un-redd.org/aboutreddDate: ScholarReducing Emissions Deforestation Forest Degradation (REDD) tries assign financial value carbon stored trees help countries invest low-carbon paths REDD+ added conservation, management forests, forest stocks.Externalities10Buchanan JM Stubblebine WC Externality.Economica. 1962; 29: 371-384Crossref benefit cost affects individual who did choose incur cost.Circular economy11European CommissionTowards circular economy: zero programme Europe.http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:52014DC0398Date: 2014Google model decouples growth finite resources. Circular keep use possible, allow recycling end products, eliminate waste.State shift12Rocha JC Biggs R Peterson GD Regime shifts: what why matter?.http://www.regimeshifts.org/datasets-resources/Date: ScholarLarge, lasting social–ecological impacts systems.Resilience8Stockholm Scholar, 13Rodin dividend: where things go wrong. PublicAffairs, York2014Google Scholar“the capacity any entity—an individual, organization, system—to prepare disruptions, recover shocks stresses, adapt grow disruptive experience.” Holocene1International Scholar A civilisations. Anthropocene2Crutzen beginning. Ecosystem3Millennium unit. services. Biodiversity5Millennium An ecosystems. Wetland6RamsarConvention metres”. Representative RCPs Social–ecological Natural scales. REDD+9UN-REDD Reducing stocks. Externalities10Buchanan cost. waste. State Large, Resilience8Stockholm “the urban populations emphasises environment, air pollution, increased physical activity, provision green space, prevent sprawl decrease magnitude heat islands. Transdisciplinary expansion. Present limitations action. In situations deliver win–win solutions co-benefits, rapid scale-up achieved if researchers move ahead assess solutions. Recent investments towards non-linear shifts important, absence predictability changes, efforts adaptation strategies remain priority. integrated surveillance collect rigorous socioeconomic, data periods early detection emerging outbreaks nutrition non-communicable burden. improvement risk communication policy makers public make evidence-informed decisions helped systematic reviews briefs. professionals role achievement health: advance tackling inequities, increasing Humanity stewarded successfully 21st addressing unacceptable inequities wealth limits Earth, generation knowledge, policies, decisive action, inspirational leadership. metrics, today history. Life expectancy soared 47 1950–1955, 69 2005–2010. Death rates children younger 5 age worldwide decreased substantially 214 per thousand live births 1950–1955 59 2005–2010.14You D Hug L Chen Y Wardlaw T Newby Levels child mortality. Inter-agency Child Mortality Estimation, 15Population Division Department Economic Social Affairs SecretariatWorld prospects: 2012 revision. Nations, York2013Crossref Human supremely successful, staging “great escape” extreme deprivation 250 years.16Deaton escape: wealth, origins inequality. Princeton Princeton2013Google number poverty fallen 0·7 30 years, despite increase 2 billion.17Olinto P Beegle K Sobrado Uematsu poor: poor, harder end, profile world's poor? Bank, DC2013Google escape accompanied unparalleled advances care, education, rights legislation, brought benefits, albeit inequitably, humanity. Humanity's progress supported biophysical atmosphere, oceans, important wetlands, tundra constant climate, air, recycle nutrients nitrogen phosphorus, regulate cycle, giving freshwater drinking sanitation.3Millennium land, seas, rivers, plants animals contain, also direct benefits—chiefly food, fuel, timber, medicinal compounds (figure 1). Alongside agriculture industry success, Earth sustenance, shelter, energy—underpinning expansion civilisation.18Sukhdev Wittmer Schröter-Schlaack et al.Mainstreaming economics nature: synthesis approach, conclusions recommendations TEEB. Economics Ecosystems Biodiversity, Geneva2010Google achieve nutrition, 7 required affecting vital ways relied throughout history.19DeFries Foley JA Asner GP Land-use choices: balancing needs function.Front Ecol Environ. 2004; 2: 249-257Crossref essence, traded off supportive regulating processes feed fuel development.20Bennett EM Gordon LJ Understanding relationships multiple services.Ecol Lett. 2009; 12: 1394-1404Crossref (1166) scale alteration difficult overstate 2). converted third ice-free desert-free surface planet cropland pasture25Foley Monfreda Ramankutty N Zaks share pie.Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2007; 104: 12585-12586Crossref (75) annually roughly accessible appropriated use.22Steffen W Broadgate Deutsch Gaffney O Ludwig trajectory Anthropocene: acceleration.The Review. 2015; 81-98Crossref Since 2000, cut down 2·3 million km2 primary forest.26Hansen MC Potapov PV Moore al.High-resolution maps 21st-century cover change.Science. 2013; 342: 850-853Crossref (4290) About 90% monitored fisheries harvested at, beyond, maximum yield limits.27FAOThe aquaculture—opportunities challenges. Food Agriculture Organization, Rome2014Google quest control dammed 60% rivers,28World DamsDams development: framework decision-making.http://www.unep.org/dams/WCD/report/WCD_DAMS%20report.pdfDate: November, 2000Google 0·5 km river.29Lehner B Liermann CR Revenga mapping reservoirs dams river-flow management.Front 2011; 9: 494-502Crossref (0) driving species extinction rate 100 times observed fossil record30Pimm SL Jenkins CN Abell al.The extinction, distribution, protection.Science. 2014; 344: 1246752Crossref (1212) remaining decreasing number. 2014 Living Planet Report24WWFLiving 2014: spaces, places. Wide Fund Nature, Gland, Switzerland2014Google estimates vertebrate have, average, had sizes 45 years. gases—carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide—are highest least 800 000 years.7IPCCClimate consequence actions, determinant conditions, rise epoch, (panel 1).2Crutzen 2005, landmark study (MEA) estimated examined, purification 2).3Millennium authors MEA warned planet's sustain no longer granted”.31Millennium AssessmentLiving beyond our means. assets Statement Board.in: Board Assessment, 2006, published WHO quarter burden was attributable modifiable factors.32Prüss-Üstün Corvalán Preventing healthy environments. Towards estimate disease.

Language: Английский

Citations

2350

Biological annihilation via the ongoing sixth mass extinction signaled by vertebrate population losses and declines DOI Open Access
Gerardo Ceballos, Paul R. Ehrlich, Rodolfo Dirzo

et al.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Journal Year: 2017, Volume and Issue: 114(30)

Published: July 10, 2017

Significance The strong focus on species extinctions, a critical aspect of the contemporary pulse biological extinction, leads to common misimpression that Earth’s biota is not immediately threatened, just slowly entering an episode major biodiversity loss. This view overlooks current trends population declines and extinctions. Using sample 27,600 terrestrial vertebrate species, more detailed analysis 177 mammal we show extremely high degree decay in vertebrates, even “species low concern.” Dwindling sizes range shrinkages amount massive anthropogenic erosion ecosystem services essential civilization. “biological annihilation” underlines seriousness for humanity ongoing sixth mass extinction event.

Language: Английский

Citations

2267

Pervasive human-driven decline of life on Earth points to the need for transformative change DOI Open Access
Sandra Dı́az, Josef Settele, Eduardo S. Brondízio

et al.

Science, Journal Year: 2019, Volume and Issue: 366(6471)

Published: Dec. 13, 2019

The human impact on life Earth has increased sharply since the 1970s, driven by demands of a growing population with rising average per capita income. Nature is currently supplying more materials than ever before, but this come at high cost unprecedented global declines in extent and integrity ecosystems, distinctness local ecological communities, abundance number wild species, domesticated varieties. Such changes reduce vital benefits that people receive from nature threaten quality future generations. Both an expanding economy costs reducing nature's are unequally distributed. fabric which we all depend-nature its contributions to people-is unravelling rapidly. Despite severity threats lack enough progress tackling them date, opportunities exist change trajectories through transformative action. action must begin immediately, however, address root economic, social, technological causes deterioration.

Language: Английский

Citations

1978

Decline of the North American avifauna DOI Open Access
Kenneth V. Rosenberg, Adriaan M. Dokter,

Peter J. Blancher

et al.

Science, Journal Year: 2019, Volume and Issue: 366(6461), P. 120 - 124

Published: Sept. 19, 2019

Species extinctions have defined the global biodiversity crisis, but extinction begins with loss in abundance of individuals that can result compositional and functional changes ecosystems. Using multiple independent monitoring networks, we report population losses across much North American avifauna over 48 years, including once-common species from most biomes. Integration range-wide trajectories size estimates indicates a net approaching 3 billion birds, or 29% 1970 abundance. A continent-wide weather radar network also reveals similarly steep decline biomass passage migrating birds recent 10-year period. This bird signals an urgent need to address threats avert future avifaunal collapse associated ecosystem integrity, function, services.

Language: Английский

Citations

1636

Sixteen years of change in the global terrestrial human footprint and implications for biodiversity conservation DOI Creative Commons
Oscar Venter, Eric W. Sanderson, Ainhoa Magrach

et al.

Nature Communications, Journal Year: 2016, Volume and Issue: 7(1)

Published: Aug. 23, 2016

Abstract Human pressures on the environment are changing spatially and temporally, with profound implications for planet’s biodiversity human economies. Here we use recently available data infrastructure, land cover access into natural areas to construct a globally standardized measure of cumulative footprint terrestrial at 1 km 2 resolution from 1993 2009. We note that while population has increased by 23% world economy grown 153%, just 9%. Still, 75% surface is experiencing measurable pressures. Moreover, perversely intense, widespread rapidly intensifying in places high biodiversity. Encouragingly, discover decreases environmental wealthiest countries those strong control corruption. Clearly Earth changing, yet there still opportunities conservation gains.

Language: Английский

Citations

1531

A mid-term analysis of progress toward international biodiversity targets DOI Open Access
Derek P. Tittensor,

Matt Walpole,

Samantha L. L. Hill

et al.

Science, Journal Year: 2014, Volume and Issue: 346(6206), P. 241 - 244

Published: Oct. 3, 2014

In 2010, the international community, under auspices of Convention on Biological Diversity, agreed 20 biodiversity-related "Aichi Targets" to be achieved within a decade. We provide comprehensive mid-term assessment progress toward these global targets using 55 indicator data sets. projected trends 2020 an adaptive statistical framework that incorporated specific properties individual time series. On current trajectories, results suggest despite accelerating policy and management responses biodiversity crisis, impacts efforts are unlikely reflected in improved state by 2020. highlight areas societal endeavor requiring additional achieve Aichi Targets, baseline against which assess future progress.

Language: Английский

Citations

1166

Marine defaunation: Animal loss in the global ocean DOI Open Access
Douglas J. McCauley, Malin L. Pinsky, Stephen R. Palumbi

et al.

Science, Journal Year: 2015, Volume and Issue: 347(6219)

Published: Jan. 15, 2015

Marine defaunation, or human-caused animal loss in the oceans, emerged forcefully only hundreds of years ago, whereas terrestrial defaunation has been occurring far longer. Though humans have caused few global marine extinctions, we profoundly affected wildlife, altering functioning and provisioning services every ocean. Current ocean trends, coupled with lessons, suggest that rates will rapidly intensify as human use oceans industrializes. protected areas are a powerful tool to harness productivity, especially when designed future climate mind, additional management strategies be required. Overall, habitat degradation is likely major driver wildlife loss. Proactive intervention can avert disaster magnitude observed on land.

Language: Английский

Citations

1164