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Referencing conservation exclusively in the past is unrealistic, and limits adaptation to present and future ecological functioning.
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Conservation in the Anthropocene should embrace complex nature-society interactions, including the role of new biodiversity.
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Achieving sustainable futures requires to balance nature protection with economic growth.
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The recent resurgence of deforestation in the Cerrado results from misguided policies and environmental negligence.
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Lack of environmental and social safeguards is driving the biome toward an irreversible tipping point.
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Licenses for vegetation clearance on private lands must carefully evaluate the ownership chain.
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Agribusiness plays a key role in strengthening conservation efforts in the Cerrado.
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A new economic model prioritizing environmental responsibility and social justice is urgently needed.
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Brazil reached 2.8 Mha of native vegetation removal in 2022, the highest rate since 2008.
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15.8 Mha of Legal Reserve areas need restoration in Brazil’s private rural properties, over half in the Amazon.
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5.46 Mha of forest regrowth occurred in Brazil from 2016 to 2022, 40% in the Amazon and 36% in the Atlantic Forest biome.
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Secondary forests in Brazil lack proper legislation to safeguard their carbon mitigation potential in the long-term.
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Incentives to environmental payment, law enforcement, and legal framework needed for Brazil's 78 Mha surplus vegetation.
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Claiming to save a biome threating another due to imprecise language is unreasonable.
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There is a multisector neglect towards the Cerrado when compared to the Amazon.
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“Savannization of the Amazon” refers to forest degradation instead of old-growth savanna.
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The term “savannization of the Amazon” can forfeit natural savanna conservation.
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The term “savannization of the Amazon” should be abandoned.
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The Brazilian legislation on native seeds has bottlenecks and gaps that can be addressed based on international best practices.
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Seed collection from nature should be discussed and standardized by environmental agencies to ensure it becomes a sustainable practice.
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Seed quality is crucial for the success of ecological restoration, but it should not adhere to the standardization required for agricultural cultivars.
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The commercialization of species mixtures for restoration, including directly harvested ones, should be facilitated to promote biodiversity.
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The implementation of seed transfer zones is highly recommended to guarantee the resilience of restored ecosystems in the long term.
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Mesocarnivores select habitats based on the risk perception communicated by larger carnivores' cues.
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Manipulating risk signals can create perceptual traps and produce a landscape of fear, supporting mesocarnivore management.
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Livestock guarding dogs' whole-body odor, reduce foxes’ visitation rates in scrublands habitats compared to unscented places.
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We propose a new complementary management technique, amplifying livestock guarding dog effects.
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High-altitude wetlands suitability will be reduced under future climate conditions.
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Projected changes in temperature and precipitation will affect future distribution of wetlands.
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Greater reductions in wetlands suitability are projected for elevations lower than 4,000 m.
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Increases in wetlands suitability are projected for elevations higher than 4,200 m.
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POPs concentrations in biological bat tissues in the Myotis in the USA decreased over the years since POPs were banned.
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There is a paucity of studies on POPs in Neotropical bats.
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Few studies were found on emerging POPs or on POPs recently included in the Stockholm Convention in bats.
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Peatland distribution and extent in the Cerrado is yet underestimated.
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Peatlands are part of Cerrado valley wetlands and occur with Veredas, wet grassland and riparian swamp forest vegetation.
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Although soil carbon data on peatlands is lacking, they may store 13.3% of the Cerrado soil carbon on only 0.7% of its area.
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Hydrological studies are needed to quantify the role of peatlands in the Cerrado.
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Intensive agriculture, wood plantations and other land uses threaten Cerrado peatlands and other wetlands.
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Biodiversity research in Brazil has claimed that the “Caatinga is poorly known”, including for well-known groups like birds.
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Even if false, this narrative perpetuates nationwide biases and slows down regional research and conservation agendas.
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We show that the Caatinga bird diversity is as well- or better known than most ecosystems in Brazil.
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Biodiversity research in the Caatinga should stand as a model for many pressing ecological questions, such as climate change.
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Bird species of the Atlantic Forest in Brazil are threatened and declining.
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Declines can lead to decreased detectability and fewer observations.
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We analyzed bird data from three citizen science platforms for 2000–2022.
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The representation of threatened and Near Threatened species decreased through time.
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We recommend future species-specific monitoring to fill survey gaps.
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Priority conservation areas (PCA) were determined for Andean condors in Colombia.
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Less than 30% of the PCA for condors are in protected areas.
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Areas with Low, Medium, and High Human Footprint Index require different strategies for prioritization conservation Areas.
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We propose an area-based roadmap to optimize Andean condor conservation in the northern Andes of South America.
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Less than 1% of the Atlantic Forest spatial surface is well sampled for small rodents.
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Most sampling sites are close to roads, urban centers.
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Well-sampled sites are in larger fragments, and in landscapes with higher percentage of forest cover.
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Knowledge of small mammal occurrence at a large-scale is spatially limited.
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Sampling of small rodents in Atlantic Forest should prioritize small remote fragments, representing current common landscape conditions.
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More than 182 bird taxa are specialized on the Amazonian floodplain habitats.
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A database with more than 80 thousand records updated range maps for floodplain birds.
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Analyses over updated range maps revealed 10 areas of endemism and 13 regions.
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Amazonian major rivers are segmented into distinct areas of endemism.
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Our regionalization represents a new background for further studies and conservation.