Drivers of change and conservation needs for vertebrates in drylands: an assessment from global scale to Sahara-Sahel wetlands
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Taylor & Francis
Materia
Biodiversity threats Climate change Conservation actions Land degradation Research needs Sustainable human development
Date
2021-11-22Referencia bibliográfica
J. C. Brito... [et al.] (2021) Drivers of change and conservation needs for vertebrates in drylands: an assessment from global scale to Sahara-Sahel wetlands, The European Zoological Journal, 88:1, 1103-1129, DOI: [10.1080/24750263.2021.1991496]
Sponsorship
Norte Portugal Regional Operational Programme [NORTE2020]; PORTUGAL 2020 Partnership Agreement, through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF); Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology European Commission CEECINST/00014/2018 AGRIGEN-NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000007Abstract
Drylands range across more than half of the global terrestrial area and harbour about a quarter of continental vertebrate species,
many of them endemic. However, this fauna is being increasingly threatened, in particular the one that inhabits deserts, one of the
last biomes on earth. This work tracks the most relevant global change drivers acting on drylands, especially in deserts and arid
regions, the conservation actions being developed, and the research needs for vertebrate conservation, following IUCN standardised
classification schemes. Using the Sahara-Sahel wetlands as case study, it is provided a detailed examination of these aspects
to support regional biodiversity conservation and human welfare. Deserts and arid regions are threatened by the synergistic effects
of increasing development of urban areas, agriculture, energy production, mining, transportation and service corridors, resulting in
pollution, invasive species, human intrusions and disturbance, biological resource overuse and in general, natural system
modifications. In addition, climate change together with social underdevelopment of many desert-range countries places the
mitigation of threat factors in a large and complex web of global-local societal challenges. Conservation actions targeting land/
water and species protection and management, as well as education, awareness, capacity building, and legislation measures to
increase livelihood development, are being developed. Additional research efforts are need to enhance biodiversity conservation
planning, monitoring biodiversity and land-degradation status (based on Essential Biodiversity Variables), and quantification of
socioeconomic factors associated with sustainable use of natural resources and human development. Sahara-Sahel wetlands are
important life-support systems for both humans and vertebrates, the last vulnerable to listed global threats. They offer framework
scenario to revert current environmental and societal challenges in deserts. Long-term conservation of desert vertebrate biodiversity
requires appropriate policy instruments to promote sustainable use of natural resources. Raising environmental alertness
within local communities of uniqueness of desert biodiversity is needed to promote policy change.