4.7 Article

Safeguarding Imperiled Biodiversity and Evolutionary Processes in the Wallacea Center of Endemism

Journal

BIOSCIENCE
Volume 72, Issue 11, Pages 1118-1130

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/biosci/biac085

Keywords

conservation; evolution; interdisciplinary science; tropical ecosystems; applied ecology

Categories

Funding

  1. UK Natural and Environmental Research Council [NE/S006990/1, NE/S007067/1, NE/S006923/1, NE/S006893/1, NE/S006958/1, NE/S006931/1, NE/S007059/1]
  2. Ministry of Research Technology and Higher Education, Indonesia [7/E1/KP.PTNBH/2021, no. 7/AMD/E1/KP.PTNBH/2020, no. NKB2892/UN2.RST/HKP.05.00/2020, 1/E1/KP.PTNBH/2019, 2488/IT3.L1/PN/2020, 3982/IT3.L1/PN/2020, 257-15/UN7.6.1/PP/2021]
  3. Leverhulme Trust Research Leadership Award

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Wallacea, as a meeting point between the Asian and Australian fauna, is highly vulnerable to anthropogenic pressures. The expansion of agriculture, mining, aquaculture, and fisheries is damaging its ecosystems and threatening both endemic species and human populations. Conservation efforts require collaborative actions and innovative management approaches.
Wallacea-the meeting point between the Asian and Australian fauna-is one of the world's largest centers of endemism. Twenty-three million years of complex geological history have given rise to a living laboratory for the study of evolution and biodiversity, highly vulnerable to anthropogenic pressures. In the present article, we review the historic and contemporary processes shaping Wallacea's biodiversity and explore ways to conserve its unique ecosystems. Although remoteness has spared many Wallacean islands from the severe overexploitation that characterizes many tropical regions, industrial-scale expansion of agriculture, mining, aquaculture and fisheries is damaging terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, denuding endemics from communities, and threatening a long-term legacy of impoverished human populations. An impending biodiversity catastrophe demands collaborative actions to improve community-based management, minimize environmental impacts, monitor threatened species, and reduce wildlife trade. Securing a positive future for Wallacea's imperiled ecosystems requires a fundamental shift away from managing marine and terrestrial realms independently.

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