Litcius/Paper detail

Mammal species composition reveals new insights into Earth's remaining wilderness

R. Travis Belote, Søren Faurby, Angela Brennan, Neil Carter, Matthew S. Dietz, Beth Hahn, William J. McShea, Josh Gage

2020Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Maps of the human footprint allow ecologists to identify the wildest lands on the planet, track their decline, and prioritize wildland conservation efforts. Other research efforts have mapped biological intactness and identified conservation priorities to protect biodiversity. However, little research has involved the use of historical references to evaluate intactness of species composition globally. We used a dataset estimating historical and current distributions of mammals to address whether the wildest places on Earth support the most intact mammal communities. Contrary to our expectations, we found that the global human footprint was not strongly correlated with mammal community intactness and uncovered surprising situations where both the human footprint and mammal species intactness were high, and other examples where both were low. Our results could be used to enhance maps and estimates of global wilderness areas by identifying wild and intact regions, while also prioritizing conservation of intact but human‐modified landscapes.

Topics & Concepts

WildernessMammalWilderness areaFootprintBiodiversityGeographyEcological footprintEcologyBiodiversity conservationBiologySustainabilityArchaeologyWildlife Ecology and ConservationSpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeZoonotic diseases and public health