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Global expansion of human-wildlife overlap in the 21st century
Nature and the biosphere
Published Science Advances 21 Aug 2024
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
02-09-2024 to 02-09-2025
Available on-demand until 2nd September 2025
Cost
Free
Education type
Article
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
Understanding the extent to which people and wildlife overlap in space and time is critical for the conservation of biodiversity and ecological services. Yet, how global change will reshape the future of human-wildlife overlap has not been assessed. We show that the potential spatial overlap of global human populations and 22,374 terrestrial vertebrate species will increase across ~56.6% and decrease across only ~11.8% of the Earth’s terrestrial surface by 2070. Increases are driven primarily by intensification of human population densities, not change in wildlife distributions caused by climate change. The strong spatial heterogeneity of future human-wildlife overlap found in our study makes it clear that local context is imperative to consider, and more targeted area-based land-use planning should be integrated into systematic conservation planning.
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