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Annual Reviews, Annual Review of Environment and Resources, 1(37), p. 25-50, 2012

DOI: 10.1146/annurev-environ-042911-093511

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Global Biodiversity Change: The Bad, the Good, and the Unknown

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Global biodiversity change is one of the most pressing environmental is-sues of our time. Here, we review current scientific knowledge on global biodiversity change and identify the main knowledge gaps. We discuss two components of biodiversity change—biodiversity alterations and biodiversity loss—across four dimensions of biodiversity: species extinc-tions, species abundances, species distributions, and genetic diversity. We briefly review the impacts that modern humans and their ancestors have had on biodiversity and discuss the recent declines and alterations in biodiversity. We analyze the direct pressures on biodiversity change: habitat change, overexploitation, exotic species, pollution, and climate change. We discuss the underlying causes, such as demographic growth and resource use, and review existing scenario projections. We identify successes and impending opportunities in biodiversity policy and man-agement, and highlight gaps in biodiversity monitoring and models. Finally, we discuss how the ecosystem services framework can be used to identify undesirable biodiversity change and allocate conservation efforts.