Suppr超能文献

大规模金属采矿对生物多样性的全球直接压力:空间分布及其对保护的影响。

Global direct pressures on biodiversity by large-scale metal mining: Spatial distribution and implications for conservation.

作者信息

Murguía Diego I, Bringezu Stefan, Schaldach Rüdiger

机构信息

Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy GmbH, Döppersberg 19, 42103 Wuppertal, Germany; Center for Environmental Systems Research (CESR), Wilhelmshöher Allee 47, 34119 Kassel, Germany.

Center for Environmental Systems Research (CESR), Wilhelmshöher Allee 47, 34119 Kassel, Germany.

出版信息

J Environ Manage. 2016 Sep 15;180:409-20. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2016.05.040. Epub 2016 Jun 3.

Abstract

Biodiversity loss is widely recognized as a serious global environmental change process. While large-scale metal mining activities do not belong to the top drivers of such change, these operations exert or may intensify pressures on biodiversity by adversely changing habitats, directly and indirectly, at local and regional scales. So far, analyses of global spatial dynamics of mining and its burden on biodiversity focused on the overlap between mines and protected areas or areas of high value for conservation. However, it is less clear how operating metal mines are globally exerting pressure on zones of different biodiversity richness; a similar gap exists for unmined but known mineral deposits. By using vascular plants' diversity as a proxy to quantify overall biodiversity, this study provides a first examination of the global spatial distribution of mines and deposits for five key metals across different biodiversity zones. The results indicate that mines and deposits are not randomly distributed, but concentrated within intermediate and high diversity zones, especially bauxite and silver. In contrast, iron, gold, and copper mines and deposits are closer to a more proportional distribution while showing a high concentration in the intermediate biodiversity zone. Considering the five metals together, 63% and 61% of available mines and deposits, respectively, are located in intermediate diversity zones, comprising 52% of the global land terrestrial surface. 23% of mines and 20% of ore deposits are located in areas of high plant diversity, covering 17% of the land. 13% of mines and 19% of deposits are in areas of low plant diversity, comprising 31% of the land surface. Thus, there seems to be potential for opening new mines in areas of low biodiversity in the future.

摘要

生物多样性丧失被广泛认为是一个严重的全球环境变化过程。虽然大规模金属采矿活动并非此类变化的主要驱动因素,但这些作业通过直接或间接改变栖息地,在局部和区域尺度上对生物多样性施加或可能加剧压力。到目前为止,对采矿的全球空间动态及其对生物多样性的负担的分析主要集中在矿山与保护区或具有高保护价值区域的重叠上。然而,尚不清楚运营中的金属矿山如何在全球范围内对不同生物多样性丰富度的区域施加压力;对于未开采但已知的矿床,也存在类似的差距。本研究以维管植物多样性作为量化整体生物多样性的指标,首次对五种关键金属的矿山和矿床在不同生物多样性区域的全球空间分布进行了考察。结果表明,矿山和矿床并非随机分布,而是集中在中度和高度多样性区域,尤其是铝土矿和银矿。相比之下,铁、金和铜矿及矿床的分布更接近比例分布,同时在中度生物多样性区域高度集中。综合考虑这五种金属,分别有63%的可用矿山和61%的矿床位于中度多样性区域,该区域占全球陆地表面的52%。23%的矿山和20%的矿床位于植物多样性高的区域,占陆地面积的17%。13%的矿山和19%的矿床位于植物多样性低的区域,占陆地面积的31%。因此,未来在生物多样性低的地区似乎有开设新矿山的潜力。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验