Scientists find only 3% of land areas unblemished by humans
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[April 17, 2021]
By Kanupriya Kapoor
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Very little of
today’s world resembles Planet Earth from 500 years ago. In fact, only
about 3% of land surfaces might be ecologically intact -- still home to
their full range of native species and unblemished by human activity,
according to new research.
The finding -- published Thursday in the journal Frontiers in Forests
and Global Change -- is far lower than previous estimates based on
satellite images, which suggested around 20% to 40% of land ecosystems
were undamaged.
For the new study, however, scientists conducted an extensive survey of
forest cover and species losses to understand better what was happening
beneath the world’s tree canopies.
"I was particularly surprised to see how low it really is," said Andrew
Plumptre, a conservation biologist at the University of Cambridge. "It
shows how rare such intact places are. It's scary just how little the
world looks like what it was just 500 years ago."
The term ecosystem describes the complex relationships within a natural
area that, altogether, help to sustain a healthy and balanced diversity
of life. Lose just one or two key species, and the whole system could
fall apart.
Today’s still-pristine habitats, containing the same species abundance
as in the year 1500 A.D., were mostly found in regions considered less
hospitable for humans, including the Sahara Desert and chilly regions of
Greenland and northern Canada.
Other intact habitats were in areas under extreme pressure from
deforestation and development, including parts of the Amazon in Latin
America.
The authors argue that these areas should be a priority for future
conservation. Though currently, only 11% of these areas are under
protection, the study found.
"The idea of focusing on intact areas is so that you don’t have to work
to remove the human footprint," Plumptre said.
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Indigenous people from the Mura tribe show a deforested area in
unmarked indigenous lands inside the Amazon rainforest near Humaita,
Amazonas State, Brazil August 20, 2019. Picture taken August 20,
2019. REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino - RC116FD51B00/File Photo
Some scientists, however, questioned the extremely
low figure, saying it could be attributed to the study using a
particularly narrow definition of "intact habitats" -- those with
their full, historical collection of animals and plants.
"We need practical actions to ensure species and ecosystems
survive," said Stuart Pimm, a conservation scientist at Duke
University.
He also questioned the study authors' call for protecting
still-intact areas, noting frozen or desert patches are not the most
abundant with species. "Encouraging nations to protect remote,
sparsely populated areas won't do biodiversity a lot of good," Pimm
said.
An effort led by the United Nations to protect 30% of the planet’s
land and waters by 2030 - up from about 17% currently under some
form of protection - has gained momentum over the last year, as
governments including the United States have pledged to commit more
land to conservation.
Some conservationists argue, however, that the world’s conservation
goal should be much higher than 30% in order to prevent mass
die-offs of species. A 2019 U.N. report estimated as many as 1
million species are under threat of extinction due to human
activity.
"30 by 30 is a nice catchphrase, but it won’t do much good if the
areas to be protected are not selected carefully," Pimm said.
(Reporting by Kanupriya Kapoor; Editing by Katy Daigle and Diane
Craft)
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