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Conserving Ecosystem Diversity in the Tropical Andes

 

 

 

Título: Conserving Ecosystem Diversity in the Tropical Andes.
Identificador de recurso: https://www.mdpi.com/journal/remotesensing
Fecha: 2022-06-14
Autor: Comer, Patrick J.; Valdez, Jose; Pereira, Henrique M.; Acosta-Muñoz, Cristina; Campos, Felipe; Bonet García, Francisco Javier; Claros, Xavier; Castro, Lucia; Dallmeier, Franciscio; Domic Rivadeneira, Enrique Yure; Gill, Mike; Josse, Carmen; Lafuente Cartagena, Indyra; Langstroth, Roberto; Larrea-Alcázar, Daniel; Masur, Annett; Morejon Jaramillo, Gustavo; Navarro, Laetitia; Novoa, Sidney; Prieto-Albuja, Francisco; Rey Ortiz, Gustavo; Teran, Marcos F.; Zambrana-Torrelio, Carlos; Fernandez; Miguel.
Otros colaboradores:  
Editorial: Remote Sens.
Derechos: Acceso Abierto

 

Descripción
Documenting temporal trends in the extent of ecosystems is essential to monitoring their status but combining this information with the degree of protection helps us assess the effectiveness of societal actions for conserving ecosystem diversity and related ecosystem services. We demonstrated indicators in the Tropical Andes using both potential (pre-industrial) and recent (~2010) distribution maps of terrestrial ecosystem types. We measured long-term ecosystem loss, representation of ecosystem types within the current protected areas, quantifying the additional representation offered by protecting Key Biodiversity Areas. Six (4.8%) ecosystem types (i.e., measured as 126 distinct vegetation macrogroups) have lost >50% in extent across four Andean countries since pre-industrial times. For ecosystem type representation within protected areas, regarding the pre-industrial extent of each type, a total of 32 types (25%) had higher representation (>30%) than the post-2020 Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) draft target in existing protected areas. Just 5 of 95 types (5.2%) within the montane Tropical Andes hotspot are currently represented with >30% within the protected areas. Thirty-nine types (31%) within these countries could cross the 30% CBD 2030 target with the addition of Key Biodiversity Areas. This indicator is based on the Essential Biodiversity Variables (EBV) and responds directly to the needs expressed by the users of these countries.
Claves essential biodiversity variables, ecosystem loss, EBV cube, ecosystem representation, trends in extent; protected areas, key biodiversity area, GEO BON.
Relación e-ISSN: 2072-4292
Cobertura EC

 

Idioma en
Volumen 14 (12)
Formato pdf
Tipo de recurso texto
Fuente https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14122847
Descarga https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14122847