Luck Gary W
Institute for Land, Water and Society, Charles Sturt University, PO Box 789, Albury, NSW, 2640 Australia.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2007 Nov;82(4):607-45. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-185X.2007.00028.x.
To explore the impacts of increasing human numbers on nature, many studies have examined relationships between human population density (HPD) and biodiversity change. The implicit assumption in many of these studies is that as population density increases so does the threat to biodiversity. The implications of this assumption are compounded by recent research showing that species richness for many taxonomic groups is often highest in areas with high HPD. If increasing HPD is a threat to conservation, this threat may be magnified owing to the spatial congruence between people and species richness. Here, I review the relationships between HPD and measures of biodiversity status focussing in particular on evidence for the spatial congruence between people and species richness and the threat that increasing HPD may pose to biodiversity conservation. The review is split into two major sections: (i) a quantitative assessment of 85 studies covering 401 analyses, including meta-analyses on discrete relationships; and (ii) a discussion of the implications of the quantitative analyses and major issues raised in the literature. Our understanding of the relationships between HPD and biodiversity is skewed by geographic and taxonomic biases in the literature. Most research has been conducted in the Northern Hemisphere and focussed primarily on birds and mammals, largely ignoring relationships with other taxonomic groups. A total of 127 analyses compared HPD with the species richness of particular taxonomic groups. A meta-analysis of these results found a significant positive population correlation indicating that, on average, species-rich regions and human settlements co-occur. However, there was substantial unexplained heterogeneity in these data. Some of this heterogeneity was explained by the size of the sampling unit used by researchers - as this increased so did the strength of the correlation between HPD and species richness. The most convincing result for a taxonomic group was a significant positive population correlation between HPD and bird species richness. Significant positive population correlations were also found for HPD versus the richness of threatened and geographically restricted species. Hence, there is reasonably good evidence for spatial congruence between people and species-rich regions. The reasons for this congruence are only just beginning to be explored, but key mutual drivers appear to include available energy and elevation. The evidence for increasing HPD as a threat to conservation was weak, owing primarily to the extreme heterogeneity in the approaches used to address this issue. There was some suggestion of a positive relationship between HPD and species extinction, but this result should be interpreted with caution owing to the wide diversity of approaches used to measure extinction. Identifying strong links between human development and species extinction is hampered in part by the difficulty of recording extinction events. The most convincing indication of the negative impact of increasing HPD was a significant negative population correlation between density and the size of protected areas. The magnitude and implications of spatial congruence between people and biodiversity are now being explored using the principles of complementarity and irreplaceability. Human development as a threat to conservation is usually assessed within a complex, interdisciplinary modelling framework, although population size is still considered a key factor. Future population growth and expansion of human settlements will present increasing challenges for conserving species-rich regions and maximising the benefits humans gain from nature.
为探究人口增长对自然的影响,许多研究考察了人口密度(HPD)与生物多样性变化之间的关系。这些研究中许多隐含的假设是,随着人口密度增加,对生物多样性的威胁也会增加。近期研究表明,许多分类群的物种丰富度在高人口密度地区往往最高,这一假设的影响变得更加复杂。如果人口密度增加对生物保护构成威胁,由于人类与物种丰富度在空间上的一致性,这种威胁可能会被放大。在此,我回顾人口密度与生物多样性状况衡量指标之间的关系,特别关注人类与物种丰富度在空间上的一致性证据,以及人口密度增加可能对生物多样性保护构成的威胁。本综述分为两个主要部分:(i)对85项研究涵盖的401项分析进行定量评估,包括对离散关系的元分析;(ii)讨论定量分析的意义以及文献中提出的主要问题。我们对人口密度与生物多样性之间关系的理解因文献中的地理和分类学偏差而存在偏差。大多数研究在北半球进行,主要集中于鸟类和哺乳动物,很大程度上忽略了与其他分类群的关系。共有127项分析将人口密度与特定分类群的物种丰富度进行了比较。对这些结果的元分析发现了显著的正种群相关性,表明平均而言,物种丰富的地区与人类聚居地共存。然而,这些数据中存在大量无法解释的异质性。其中一些异质性可由研究人员使用的采样单元大小来解释——随着采样单元增大,人口密度与物种丰富度之间的相关性强度也会增加。对于一个分类群最有说服力的结果是人口密度与鸟类物种丰富度之间存在显著的正种群相关性。在人口密度与受威胁物种和地理分布受限物种的丰富度之间也发现了显著的正种群相关性。因此,有相当充分的证据表明人类与物种丰富地区在空间上存在一致性。这种一致性的原因才刚刚开始被探索,但关键的共同驱动因素似乎包括可用能量和海拔。人口密度增加作为对生物保护的威胁的证据很薄弱,主要是因为处理这个问题所采用的方法存在极大的异质性。有一些迹象表明人口密度与物种灭绝之间存在正相关关系,但由于用于衡量灭绝的方法多种多样,这个结果应谨慎解读。记录灭绝事件的困难在一定程度上阻碍了确定人类发展与物种灭绝之间的紧密联系。人口密度增加产生负面影响最有说服力的迹象是密度与保护区面积之间存在显著的负种群相关性。现在正利用互补性和不可替代性原则来探索人类与生物多样性在空间上的一致性的程度和意义。尽管人口规模仍然被视为一个关键因素,但人类发展作为对生物保护的威胁通常是在一个复杂的跨学科建模框架内进行评估的。未来人口增长和人类聚居地的扩张将给保护物种丰富地区以及使人类从自然中获得的利益最大化带来越来越大的挑战。