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(2003) Habitat conversion and global avian biodiversity loss

Authors
Gaston K.J. , Blackburn T.M. , Goldewijk K.K.
Source
Proceedings B of the Royal Society (46)
Type
P - Paper (2851)
Peer Review
1 - High (2301)
Audience
S - Specialist (3514)
Pages
1293-1300
Journal Number
270
Notes

Abstract: The magnitude of the impacts of human activities on global biodiversity has been documented at several organizational levels. However, although there have been numerous studies of the effects of local-scale changes in land use (e.g. logging) on the abundance of groups of organisms, broader continental or globalscale analyses addressing the same basic issues remain largely wanting. None the less, changing patterns of land use, associated with the appropriation of increasing proportions of net primary productivity by the human population, seem likely not simply to have reduced the diversity of life, but also to have reduced the carrying capacity of the environment in terms of the numbers of other organisms that it can sustain. Here, we estimate the size of the existing global breeding bird population, and then make a first approximation as to how much this has been modified as a consequence of land-use changes wrought by human activities. Summing numbers across different land-use classes gives a best current estimate of a global population of less than 100 billion breeding bird individuals. Applying the same methodology to estimates of original land-use distributions suggests that conservatively this may represent a loss of between a fifth and a quarter of pre-agricultural bird numbers. This loss is shared across a range of temperate and tropical land-use types.

World_link Resources online

Folder Categories
Birds Physical Processes of Climate Change and Associated Impacts Temperature
 
Tag_blue Keywords
global numbers land-use change populations
 
 
 

Entered by: Joanna Corrie, 3/2009

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