| Literature DB >> 36224387 |
David A Keith1,2,3, José R Ferrer-Paris4,5, Emily Nicholson5,6, Melanie J Bishop7, Beth A Polidoro8, Eva Ramirez-Llodra9,10, Mark G Tozer4,11, Jeanne L Nel12,13, Ralph Mac Nally14, Edward J Gregr15,16, Kate E Watermeyer6, Franz Essl17,18, Don Faber-Langendoen19, Janet Franklin20, Caroline E R Lehmann21,22, Andrés Etter23, Dirk J Roux12,24, Jonathan S Stark25, Jessica A Rowland5,6, Neil A Brummitt26, Ulla C Fernandez-Arcaya27, Iain M Suthers4, Susan K Wiser28, Ian Donohue29, Leland J Jackson30, R Toby Pennington21,31, Thomas M Iliffe32, Vasilis Gerovasileiou33,34, Paul Giller35,36, Belinda J Robson37, Nathalie Pettorelli38, Angela Andrade5,39, Arild Lindgaard40, Teemu Tahvanainen41, Aleks Terauds25, Michael A Chadwick42, Nicholas J Murray4,5,43, Justin Moat44, Patricio Pliscoff45,46, Irene Zager47, Richard T Kingsford4.
Abstract
As the United Nations develops a post-2020 global biodiversity framework for the Convention on Biological Diversity, attention is focusing on how new goals and targets for ecosystem conservation might serve its vision of 'living in harmony with nature'1,2. Advancing dual imperatives to conserve biodiversity and sustain ecosystem services requires reliable and resilient generalizations and predictions about ecosystem responses to environmental change and management3. Ecosystems vary in their biota4, service provision5 and relative exposure to risks6, yet there is no globally consistent classification of ecosystems that reflects functional responses to change and management. This hampers progress on developing conservation targets and sustainability goals. Here we present the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Global Ecosystem Typology, a conceptually robust, scalable, spatially explicit approach for generalizations and predictions about functions, biota, risks and management remedies across the entire biosphere. The outcome of a major cross-disciplinary collaboration, this novel framework places all of Earth's ecosystems into a unifying theoretical context to guide the transformation of ecosystem policy and management from global to local scales. This new information infrastructure will support knowledge transfer for ecosystem-specific management and restoration, globally standardized ecosystem risk assessments, natural capital accounting and progress on the post-2020 global biodiversity framework.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36224387 PMCID: PMC9581774 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05318-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 69.504