Litcius/Paper detail

Impacts of the global food system on terrestrial biodiversity from land use and climate change

Elizabeth H. Boakes, Carole Dalin, Adrienne Etard, Tim Newbold

2024Nature Communications84 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The global food system is a key driver of land-use and climate change which in turn drive biodiversity change. Developing sustainable food systems is therefore critical to reversing biodiversity loss. We use the multi-regional input-output model EXIOBASE to estimate the biodiversity impacts embedded within the global food system in 2011. Using models that capture regional variation in the sensitivity of biodiversity both to land use and climate change, we calculate the land-driven and greenhouse gas-driven footprints of food using two metrics of biodiversity: local species richness and rarity-weighted species richness. We show that the footprint of land area underestimates biodiversity impact in more species-rich regions and that our metric of rarity-weighted richness places a greater emphasis on biodiversity costs in Central and South America. We find that methane emissions are responsible for 70% of the overall greenhouse gas-driven biodiversity footprint and that, in several regions, emissions from a single year's food production are associated with global biodiversity loss equivalent to 2% or more of that region's total land-driven biodiversity loss. The measures we present are relatively simple to calculate and could be incorporated into decision-making and environmental impact assessments by governments and businesses.

Topics & Concepts

BiodiversitySpecies richnessGreenhouse gasClimate changeLand useLand use, land-use change and forestryGlobal biodiversityEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental scienceGeographyEcological footprintNatural resource economicsMeasurement of biodiversitySustainabilityEcologyBiologyBiodiversity conservationEconomicsAgriculture Sustainability and Environmental ImpactEnvironmental Impact and SustainabilityEconomic and Environmental Valuation