4.7 Article

Biodiversity response to rapid successive land cover conversions in human-dominated landscapes

期刊

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION
卷 45, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gecco.2023.e02510

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Landscape change; Habitat fragmentation; Biological legacies; Legacy effects; Biotic lag effects; Ecological theory; Land use change; Landscape transformation; Recurrent human disturbances

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Much of the world's land cover has been changed by humans, impacting biodiversity. Repeated conversions of modified land cover can significantly affect biodiversity, and the response is influenced by several factors including conversion completeness, persistence of biological legacies, number of previous conversions, time elapsed, and contrast between previous and new covers. Biodiversity responses are species and cover type specific, and cannot be easily predicted from single landscape conversions. Ignoring the impacts of successive land cover conversions could lead to increased biodiversity loss, thus impact assessments and conservation efforts are crucial.
Much of the world's formerly intact land cover has been modified by humans with major im-pacts on biodiversity. Extensive areas of already modified land are now being subjected to yet further land cover conversions. Indeed, in many places, land cover and land use are changing repeatedly and frequently. Here, we use ecological theory to develop a new conceptual frame-work with associated postulates about how biodiversity could respond to repeated and rapid changes in land cover (over timespans of years to decades). Our framework focuses on five drivers: (1) conversion completeness, (2) persistence of bio-logical, chemical, and physical legacies from previous land cover type to a new kind of cover, (3) number of previous land cover conversions, (4) time elapsed since land cover change, and (5) levels of contrast between the previous and new land cover. We predicted that biodiversity re-sponses to repeated conversions in human-generated land cover would be a function of the main effects of these five drivers, as well as complex interactions among them (e.g. each new land cover type may act as a filter for species assemblages and interact in complex spatio-temporal ways with the previous land cover). Biodiversity responses may therefore be species-and land cover type specific, and not be readily predictable from insights provided by studies of single landscape conversions from an intact to a human-dominated ecosystem. Ignoring the impacts of successive land cover conversions on biodiversity could lead to increased biodiversity loss with each land cover conversion. Therefore, impact assessments are needed each time a new land cover conversion is proposed. Policies and management actions need to focus on the maintenance and/or restoration of remnant vegetation and other kinds of natural features (like large trees and wetlands) with each land cover conversion.

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