Université Paris-Diderot, Sorbonne Paris Cité, UMR 8586 PRODIG, Paris, F-75013, France.
Sorbonne Université, Institut de Géographie, Paris, F-75005, France.
Environ Manage. 2019 Jun;63(6):822-834. doi: 10.1007/s00267-019-01168-5. Epub 2019 May 3.
As a parallel to the "biodiversity hotspot" concept used in conservation biology, "geodiversity hotspots" can be defined as geographic areas that harbor very high levels of geodiversity while being threatened by human activities. Identifying geodiversity hotspots may offer a powerful way to set geoconservation priorities, but numerical methods integrating both geodiversity values and threats are still lacking. Here we propose for the first time an integrated approach using GIS and geoprocessing to map geodiversity hotspots at a regional scale, with a cartographic application to the Ceará State (Northeastern Brazil). The method is based on the quantification and mapping of two numerical indices: a geodiversity index (GI) and a threat index (TI). On one hand, the GI is calculated as the sum of four sub-indexes representing the main components of geodiversity, i.e., geological diversity (rocks, minerals, fossils), geomorphodiversity (topography and landforms), pedodiversity (soils and palaeosoils) and hydrodiversity (surface and underground waters). On the other hand, the TI is calculated as the sum of three sub-indexes including the level of environmental protection, the degree of land degradation and the type of land use. Mapping and delineation of geodiversity hotspots are automatically obtained from a combination of GI and TI, i.e., in areas where higher geodiversity indexes coincide with higher threat indexes. In the study area, results show the spatial delimitation of five geodiversity hotspots, including the Araripe basin (to the South), partly recognized as a UNESCO Global Geopark since 2006, and the Fortaleza metropolitan region (to the North), both faced with severe threats to geodiversity. In addition to a tool for geoconservation, geodiversity hotspots could also provide useful support for biodiversity research and action programs, given the structural and functional links between geodiversity and biodiversity.
与保护生物学中使用的“生物多样性热点”概念类似,可以将“地质多样性热点”定义为那些具有非常高的地质多样性水平,同时又受到人类活动威胁的地理区域。确定地质多样性热点可能是确定地质保护优先事项的有力方法,但目前仍缺乏综合地质多样性价值和威胁的数值方法。在这里,我们首次提出了一种使用 GIS 和地理处理技术来绘制区域尺度地质多样性热点的综合方法,并在巴西东北部塞阿拉州进行了制图应用。该方法基于量化和绘制两个数值指数:地质多样性指数(GI)和威胁指数(TI)。一方面,GI 是通过计算代表地质多样性主要组成部分的四个子指数的总和来计算的,即地质多样性(岩石、矿物、化石)、地貌多样性(地形和地貌)、土壤多样性(土壤和古土壤)和水文多样性(地表水和地下水)。另一方面,TI 是通过计算包括环境保护水平、土地退化程度和土地利用类型的三个子指数的总和来计算的。地质多样性热点的制图和划定是通过 GI 和 TI 的组合自动获得的,即地质多样性指数较高且威胁指数较高的地区。在研究区域中,结果显示了五个地质多样性热点的空间划定,包括 2006 年以来被联合国教科文组织认定为全球地质公园的阿雷里佩盆地(南部)和福塔莱萨大都市区(北部),这两个地区都面临着地质多样性的严重威胁。除了作为地质保护的工具外,地质多样性热点还可以为生物多样性研究和行动计划提供有用的支持,因为地质多样性和生物多样性之间存在结构和功能联系。