Global Protect Oceans, Lands and Waters, The Nature Conservancy, Fort Collins, CO, 80524, USA.
Global Science, The Nature Conservancy, Fort Collins, CO, 80521, USA.
Sci Data. 2024 Jul 30;11(1):830. doi: 10.1038/s41597-024-03639-9.
Proactively identifying where land conversion might occur is critical to targeted and effective conservation planning. Previous efforts to map future habitat loss have largely focused on forested systems and have been limited in their consideration of drivers of loss. We developed a 1-km resolution, global map of land conversion pressure from multiple drivers, referred to as the conversion pressure index (CPI). The CPI combines past rates of anthropogenic change, as measured by temporal human modification maps, with suitability maps for potential future expansion by large-scale development. The CPI thus offers a new way to measure a cumulative gradient of anthropogenic pressure as opposed to categorical land cover change. We find that nearly 23% of land across 200 countries have relatively high conversion pressure, potentially impacting over 460 million ha of intact natural lands. We illustrate how this information can be used to identify areas for proactive conservation to avoid future loss and ensure that national commitments under the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity and Paris Agreement Climate Frameworks are upheld.
主动识别土地转换可能发生的地方对于有针对性和有效的保护规划至关重要。以前对未来栖息地丧失进行的测绘工作主要集中在森林系统上,并且在考虑丧失的驱动因素方面存在局限性。我们开发了一个 1 公里分辨率的全球多驱动因素土地转换压力图,称为转换压力指数 (CPI)。CPI 将过去由人为改变所衡量的时间变化率,与大规模发展的潜在未来扩张适宜性图结合起来。因此,CPI 提供了一种新的方法来衡量人为压力的累积梯度,而不是分类土地覆盖变化。我们发现,全球 200 个国家中有近 23%的土地面临较高的转换压力,这可能影响到超过 4.6 亿公顷的完整自然土地。我们说明了如何利用这些信息来确定主动保护的区域,以避免未来的损失,并确保履行《昆明-蒙特利尔全球生物多样性协定》和《巴黎协定气候框架》下的国家承诺。