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Antarctica's wilderness fails to capture continent's biodiversity
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-20, 21:28 authored by Leihy, RI, Coetzee, BWT, Morgan, F, Ben RaymondBen Raymond, Shaw, JD, Terauds, A, Bastmeijer, K, Chown, SLRecent assessments of Earth’s dwindling wilderness have emphasized that Antarctica is a crucial wilderness in need of protection. Yet human impacts on the continent are widespread, the extent of its wilderness unquantified and the importance thereof for biodiversity conservation unknown. Here we assemble a comprehensive record of human activity (approximately 2.7 million records, spanning 200 years) and use it to quantify the extent of Antarctica’s wilderness and its representation of biodiversity. We show that 99.6% of the continent’s area can still be considered wilderness, but this area captures few biodiversity features. Pristine areas, free from human interference, cover a much smaller area (less than 32% of Antarctica) and are declining as human activity escalates. Urgent expansion of Antarctica’s network of specially protected areas can both reverse this trend and secure the continent’s biodiversity.
History
Publication title
NatureVolume
583Issue
7817Pagination
567-571ISSN
0028-0836Department/School
Institute for Marine and Antarctic StudiesPublisher
Nature Publishing GroupPlace of publication
Macmillan Building, 4 Crinan St, London, England, N1 9XwRights statement
Copyright 2020 Nature ResearchRepository Status
- Restricted