Confronting a biome crisis: global disparities of habitat loss and protection

Published Article

Global

Publication date: December 3, 2003

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Human‑driven habitat loss is creating a global biome crisis. Many biomes and ecoregions face severe risk as habitat conversion far exceeds protection, threatening biodiversity and ecosystem function.

Subject Tags

  • Ecosystem management
  • Biodiversity

Abstract

Human impacts on the natural environment have reached such proportions that in addition to an ‘extinction crisis’, we now also face a broader ‘biome crisis’. Here we identify the world's terrestrial biomes and, at a finer spatial scale, ecoregions in which biodiversity and ecological function are at greatest risk because of extensive habitat conversion and limited habitat protection. Habitat conversion exceeds habitat protection by a ratio of 8:1 in temperate grasslands and Mediterranean biomes, and 10:1 in more than 140 ecoregions. These regions include some of the most biologically distinctive, species rich ecosystems on Earth, as well as the last home of many threatened and endangered species. Confronting the biome crisis requires a concerted and comprehensive response aimed at protecting not only species, but the variety of landscapes, ecological interactions, and evolutionary pressures that sustain biodiversity, generate ecosystem services, and evolve new species in the future.

Citation

Hoekstra, J. M., Boucher, T. M., Ricketts, T. H., & Roberts, C. (2005). Confronting a biome crisis: global disparities of habitat loss and protection. Ecology letters8(1), 23-29.

TNC Authors

  • Jonathan M. Hoekstra
    Global Priorities Group
    The Nature Conservancy
    Email: jhoekstra@tnc.org

  • Timothy M. Boucher
    Global Priorities Group
    The Nature Conservancy