An ecoregion-based approach to restoring the world's intact large mammal assemblages

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Dataset:6685984



DOI10.5281/zenodo.5810142Zenodo5810142MaRDI QIDQ6685984FDOQ6685984

Dataset published at Zenodo repository.

Neil Burgess, Eric Dinerstein, Reed Noss, Joe Gosling, Calum Maney, José F. González-Maya, Yadvendradev Jhala, Jan Schipper, Néstor Fernández, Carly Vynne, Anup Joshi, David Olson, Andy T. L. Lee, William J. Ripple, Sanjiv Fernando, Michael Proctor, Harshini Jhala, Jens-Christian Svenning

Publication date: 9 January 2022



Assemblages of large mammal species play a disproportionate role in the structure and composition of natural habitats. Loss of these assemblages destabilizes natural systems, while their recovery can restore ecological integrity. Here we take an ecoregion-based approach to identify landscapes that retain their historically present large mammal assemblages, and map ecoregions where reintroduction of 1–3 species could restore intact assemblages. Intact mammal assemblages occur across more than one-third of the 730 terrestrial ecoregions where large mammals were historically present, and 22% of these ecoregions retain complete assemblages across 20% of the ecoregion area. Twenty species, if reintroduced or allowed to recolonize through improved connectivity, can trigger restoration of complete assemblages over 54% of the terrestrial realm (11,116,000 km2). Each of these species have at least two large, intact habitat areas (10,000 km2) in a given ecoregion. Timely integration of recovery efforts for large mammals strengthens area-based targets being considered under the Convention on Biological Diversity.







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