Loading…

Challenges and solutions to biodiversity conservation in arid lands

The strategic goals of the United Nations and the Aichi Targets for biodiversity conservation have not been met. Instead, biodiversity has continued to rapidly decrease, especially in developing countries. Setting a new global biodiversity framework requires clarifying future priorities and strategi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Science of the total environment 2023-01, Vol.857, p.159695-159695, Article 159695
Main Authors: Zhang, Yuanming, Tariq, Akash, Hughes, Alice C., Hong, Deyuan, Wei, Fuwen, Sun, Hang, Sardans, Jordi, Peñuelas, Josep, Perry, Gad, Qiao, Jianfang, Kurban, Alishir, Jia, Xiaoxia, Raimondo, Domitilla, Pan, Borong, Yang, Weikang, Zhang, Daoyuan, Li, Wenjun, Ahmed, Zeeshan, Beierkuhnlein, Carl, Lazkov, Georgy, Toderich, Kristina, Karryeva, Shirin, Dehkonov, Davron, Hisoriev, Hikmat, Dimeyeva, Liliya, Milko, Dmitry, Soule, Ahmedou, Suska-Malawska, Malgozhata, Saparmuradov, Jumamurat, Bekzod, Alilov, Allin, Paul, Dieye, Sidy, Cissse, Birane, Whibesilassie, Wondmagegne, Ma, Keping
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:The strategic goals of the United Nations and the Aichi Targets for biodiversity conservation have not been met. Instead, biodiversity has continued to rapidly decrease, especially in developing countries. Setting a new global biodiversity framework requires clarifying future priorities and strategies to bridge challenges and provide representative solutions. Hyper-arid, arid, and semi-arid lands (herein, arid lands) form about one third of the Earth's terrestrial surface. Arid lands contain unique biological and cultural diversity, and biodiversity loss in arid lands can have a disproportionate impact on these ecosystems due to low redundancy and a high risk of trophic cascades. They contain unique biological and cultural diversity and host many endemic species, including wild relatives of key crop plants. Yet extensive agriculture, unsustainable use, and global climate change are causing an irrecoverable damage to arid lands, with far-reaching consequences to the species, ground-water resources, ecosystem productivity, and ultimately the communities' dependant on these systems. However, adequate research and effective policies to protect arid land biodiversity and sustainability are lacking because a large proportion of arid areas are in developing countries, and the unique diversity in these systems is frequently overlooked. Developing new priorities for global arid lands and mechanisms to prevent unsustainable development must become part of public discourse and form the basis for conservation efforts. The current situation demands the combined efforts of researchers, practitioners, policymakers, and local communities to adopt a socio-ecological approach for achieving sustainable development (SDGs) in arid lands. Applying these initiatives globally is imperative to conserve arid lands biodiversity and the critical ecological services they provide for future generations. This perspective provides a framework for conserving biodiversity in arid lands for all stakeholders that will have a tangible impact on sustainable development, nature, and human well-being. •Biodiversity in arid-lands is very sensitive to some forms of perturbation and very slow to recover.•Arid-lands are vulnerable to agriculture such as grazing of cattle and irrigation, which need certification standards to ensure best practice and reduce impact.•Combined efforts of researchers, practitioners, policymakers, and local communities are needed to adopt a socio-ecological approach.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.159695