Current Biology
Volume 26, Issue 21, 7 November 2016, Pages 2929-2934
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Report
Catastrophic Declines in Wilderness Areas Undermine Global Environment Targets

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2016.08.049Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Globally important wilderness areas are ignored in conservation policy

  • We reveal that extensive losses of wilderness have occurred in the last two decades

  • Efforts aimed at protecting wilderness areas are failing to keep pace with its loss

  • International policy must recognize the actions needed to maintain wilderness areas

Summary

Humans have altered terrestrial ecosystems for millennia [1], yet wilderness areas still remain as vital refugia where natural ecological and evolutionary processes operate with minimal human disturbance [2, 3, 4], underpinning key regional- and planetary-scale functions [5, 6]. Despite the myriad values of wilderness areas—as critical strongholds for endangered biodiversity [7], for carbon storage and sequestration [8], for buffering and regulating local climates [9], and for supporting many of the world’s most politically and economically marginalized communities [10]—they are almost entirely ignored in multilateral environmental agreements. This is because they are assumed to be relatively free from threatening processes and therefore are not a priority for conservation efforts [11, 12]. Here we challenge this assertion using new comparable maps of global wilderness following methods established in the original “last of the wild” analysis [13] to examine the change in extent since the early 1990s. We demonstrate alarming losses comprising one-tenth (3.3 million km2) of global wilderness areas over the last two decades, particularly in the Amazon (30%) and central Africa (14%). We assess increases in the protection of wilderness over the same time frame and show that these efforts are failing to keep pace with the rate of wilderness loss, which is nearly double the rate of protection. Our findings underscore an immediate need for international policies to recognize the vital values of wilderness and the unprecedented threats they face and to underscore urgent large-scale, multifaceted actions needed to maintain them.

Keywords

wilderness
habitat intactness
human footprint
conservation biology
environmental mapping
remote sensing
spatial prioritization
spatial planning
Convention for Biological Diversity

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