2019
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14549
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Managing the middle: A shift in conservation priorities based on the global human modification gradient

Abstract: An increasing number of international initiatives aim to reconcile development with conservation. Crucial to successful implementation of these initiatives is a comprehensive understanding of the current ecological condition of landscapes and their spatial distributions. Here, we provide a cumulative measure of human modification of terrestrial lands based on modeling the physical extents of 13 anthropogenic stressors and their estimated impacts using spatially explicit global datasets with a median year of 20… Show more

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Cited by 432 publications
(444 citation statements)
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References 76 publications
(182 reference statements)
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“…Furthermore, we recognize the potential for spatial error and change over time when using point locations to estimate local human footprint from a global dataset (Kennedy et al . ). When we accounted for the degree of urban development, we found that habitats with greater urban development were associated with lower parasitism (with all transmission modes combined due to smaller sample size), suggesting that the transmission of some types of parasites may be interrupted in highly urban areas.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Furthermore, we recognize the potential for spatial error and change over time when using point locations to estimate local human footprint from a global dataset (Kennedy et al . ). When we accounted for the degree of urban development, we found that habitats with greater urban development were associated with lower parasitism (with all transmission modes combined due to smaller sample size), suggesting that the transmission of some types of parasites may be interrupted in highly urban areas.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…We calculated footprints as the proportion of a buffer circle around a wetland centroid covered by each feature using binary rasters of disturbance features (1 or 0) summarized using the NACT toolbox in ArcMap 10.4 (Price et al ). This approach supported principles of parsimony and provided a realistic metric of disturbance where values ranged from zero (no disturbance within the buffer circle) to 1 (the buffer circle consists entirely of disturbance features; Kennedy et al ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We assumed a certain level of non‐independence between our 3 selected disturbance features and addressed any resulting potential bias using a fuzzy algebraic sum, which is a fuzzy operator common to geospatial analyses (Bonham‐Carter , Malczewski , Theobald , Kennedy et al ). The sum and disturbance index can be described as: Hit=1false(false(1Fwitfalse)×false(1Fritfalse)×false(1Fmitfalse)false),where H it is the disturbance index for wetland i during year t and F wit , F rit , and F mit are the footprint values for a well, road, and gravel pit, respectively, at wetland i during year t .…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Venter, Possingham, and Watson (2019) express two main concerns with Kennedy et al (2019): (a) that the results "underestimate the extent, and therefore importance, of Earth's remaining unmodified lands"; and that (b) "the HM exhibits high rates of error." Venter, Possingham, and Watson (2019) express two main concerns with Kennedy et al (2019): (a) that the results "underestimate the extent, and therefore importance, of Earth's remaining unmodified lands"; and that (b) "the HM exhibits high rates of error."…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In fact, in Kennedy et al (2019), we call for "a focus on preventing and confining habitat loss" in the remaining one-third of the world's low modified ecoregions. Importantly, we also call for increased attention to the 52% of moderately modified ecoregions, which fall through the cracks under current conservation prioritization schemes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%