Institute for Global Change Biology, School for Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Department of Biology, Center for Ecosystem Sentinels, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Sci Adv. 2024 Aug 23;10(34):eadp7706. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.adp7706. Epub 2024 Aug 21.
Understanding the extent to which people and wildlife overlap in space and time is critical for the conservation of biodiversity and ecological services. Yet, how global change will reshape the future of human-wildlife overlap has not been assessed. We show that the potential spatial overlap of global human populations and 22,374 terrestrial vertebrate species will increase across ~56.6% and decrease across only ~11.8% of the Earth's terrestrial surface by 2070. Increases are driven primarily by intensification of human population densities, not change in wildlife distributions caused by climate change. The strong spatial heterogeneity of future human-wildlife overlap found in our study makes it clear that local context is imperative to consider, and more targeted area-based land-use planning should be integrated into systematic conservation planning.
了解人类和野生动物在空间和时间上的重叠程度对于保护生物多样性和生态服务至关重要。然而,全球变化将如何重塑未来的人类与野生动物的重叠尚未得到评估。我们表明,到 2070 年,全球人口和 22374 种陆地脊椎动物物种的潜在空间重叠将增加约 56.6%,而仅减少约 11.8%的地球陆地表面。这种增加主要是由于人类人口密度的加强,而不是由于气候变化导致野生动物分布的变化。我们的研究发现,未来人类与野生动物重叠的空间异质性很强,这清楚地表明,必须考虑当地的具体情况,并且应该将更有针对性的基于区域的土地利用规划纳入系统保护规划中。