| Literature DB >> 33833421 |
Louise Mair1, Leon A Bennun2,3, Thomas M Brooks4,5,6, Stuart H M Butchart3,7, Friederike C Bolam8,9, Neil D Burgess9,10, Jonathan M M Ekstrom2, E J Milner-Gulland11, Michael Hoffmann12, Keping Ma13, Nicholas B W Macfarlane14, Domitilla C Raimondo15,16, Ana S L Rodrigues17, Xiaoli Shen13, Bernardo B N Strassburg18,19, Craig R Beatty14,20, Carla Gómez-Creutzberg21, Alvaro Iribarrem18,19, Meizani Irmadhiany22, Eduardo Lacerda19,23, Bianca C Mattos24, Karmila Parakkasi22, Marcelo F Tognelli25,26, Elizabeth L Bennett27, Catherine Bryan28, Giulia Carbone4, Abhishek Chaudhary29, Maxime Eiselin30, Gustavo A B da Fonseca31, Russell Galt32, Arne Geschke33, Louise Glew20, Romie Goedicke30, Jonathan M H Green34, Richard D Gregory35,36, Samantha L L Hill9, David G Hole25, Jonathan Hughes9, Jonathan Hutton37, Marco P W Keijzer30, Laetitia M Navarro38,39, Eimear Nic Lughadha40, Andrew J Plumptre3,41, Philippe Puydarrieux4, Hugh P Possingham42,43, Aleksandar Rankovic44, Eugenie C Regan9,45, Carlo Rondinini46, Joshua D Schneck14, Juha Siikamäki14, Cyriaque Sendashonga4, Gilles Seutin47, Sam Sinclair48, Andrew L Skowno15,49, Carolina A Soto-Navarro9,37, Simon N Stuart28,50,51, Helen J Temple2, Antoine Vallier52, Francesca Verones53, Leonardo R Viana25,54, James Watson27,43, Simeon Bezeng55,56, Monika Böhm12, Ian J Burfield7, Viola Clausnitzer57, Colin Clubbe40, Neil A Cox25,26, Jörg Freyhof58, Leah R Gerber59, Craig Hilton-Taylor32, Richard Jenkins32, Ackbar Joolia32, Lucas N Joppa60, Lian Pin Koh61, Thomas E Lacher62,63, Penny F Langhammer63,64, Barney Long63, David Mallon65, Michela Pacifici46, Beth A Polidoro59,66, Caroline M Pollock32, Malin C Rivers67, Nicolette S Roach62,63, Jon Paul Rodríguez68,69,70, Jane Smart4, Bruce E Young71, Frank Hawkins14, Philip J K McGowan8.
Abstract
The Convention on Biological Diversity's post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework will probably include a goal to stabilize and restore the status of species. Its delivery would be facilitated by making the actions required to halt and reverse species loss spatially explicit. Here, we develop a species threat abatement and restoration (STAR) metric that is scalable across species, threats and geographies. STAR quantifies the contributions that abating threats and restoring habitats in specific places offer towards reducing extinction risk. While every nation can contribute towards halting biodiversity loss, Indonesia, Colombia, Mexico, Madagascar and Brazil combined have stewardship over 31% of total STAR values for terrestrial amphibians, birds and mammals. Among actions, sustainable crop production and forestry dominate, contributing 41% of total STAR values for these taxonomic groups. Key Biodiversity Areas cover 9% of the terrestrial surface but capture 47% of STAR values. STAR could support governmental and non-state actors in quantifying their contributions to meeting science-based species targets within the framework.Year: 2021 PMID: 33833421 DOI: 10.1038/s41559-021-01432-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Ecol Evol ISSN: 2397-334X Impact factor: 15.460