Research Domain Sustainable Solutions, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Potsdam, Germany.
Department Technology Assessment and Substance Cycles, Leibniz Institute for Agricultural Engineering and Bioeconomy (ATB), Potsdam, Germany.
Glob Chang Biol. 2018 Jul;24(7):3199-3213. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14272. Epub 2018 May 4.
Agricultural expansion is a leading driver of biodiversity loss across the world, but little is known on how future land-use change may encroach on remaining natural vegetation. This uncertainty is, in part, due to unknown levels of future agricultural intensification and international trade. Using an economic land-use model, we assessed potential future losses of natural vegetation with a focus on how these may threaten biodiversity hotspots and intact forest landscapes. We analysed agricultural expansion under proactive and reactive biodiversity protection scenarios, and for different rates of pasture intensification. We found growing food demand to lead to a significant expansion of cropland at the expense of pastures and natural vegetation. In our reference scenario, global cropland area increased by more than 400 Mha between 2015 and 2050, mostly in Africa and Latin America. Grazing intensification was a main determinant of future land-use change. In Africa, higher rates of pasture intensification resulted in smaller losses of natural vegetation, and reduced pressure on biodiversity hotspots and intact forest landscapes. Investments into raising pasture productivity in conjunction with proactive land-use planning appear essential in Africa to reduce further losses of areas with high conservation value. In Latin America, in contrast, higher pasture productivity resulted in increased livestock exports, highlighting that unchecked trade can reduce the land savings of pasture intensification. Reactive protection of sensitive areas significantly reduced the conversion of natural ecosystems in Latin America. We conclude that protection strategies need to adapt to region-specific trade positions. In regions with a high involvement in international trade, area-based conservation measures should be preferred over strategies aimed at increasing pasture productivity, which by themselves might not be sufficient to protect biodiversity effectively.
农业扩张是全球生物多样性丧失的主要驱动因素,但对于未来土地利用变化如何蚕食剩余的自然植被知之甚少。这种不确定性部分归因于未来农业集约化和国际贸易的未知水平。我们使用经济土地利用模型,评估了自然植被的潜在未来损失,重点关注这些损失如何威胁生物多样性热点和完整的森林景观。我们分析了在积极和消极的生物多样性保护情景下,以及在不同的牧场集约化率下,农业扩张的情况。我们发现,粮食需求的增长导致耕地大量扩张,而牧场和自然植被则受到了损失。在我们的参考情景中,全球耕地面积在 2015 年至 2050 年间增加了 400 多万公顷以上,主要集中在非洲和拉丁美洲。放牧集约化是未来土地利用变化的主要决定因素。在非洲,更高的牧场集约化率导致自然植被的损失减少,对生物多样性热点和完整的森林景观的压力减轻。在非洲,投资提高牧场生产力并与积极的土地利用规划相结合,对于减少具有高保护价值的地区的进一步损失至关重要。相比之下,在拉丁美洲,更高的牧场生产力导致了更多的牲畜出口,这突出表明不受控制的贸易可能会减少牧场集约化的土地节约。对敏感地区的被动保护显著减少了拉丁美洲自然生态系统的转化。我们的结论是,保护策略需要适应特定地区的贸易地位。在高度参与国际贸易的地区,应优先采用基于区域的保护措施,而不是旨在提高牧场生产力的策略,仅靠后者可能不足以有效地保护生物多样性。