BusinessMirror

50,000 wild species meet needs of billions worldwide

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BONN, Germany—billions of people, in developed and developing nations, benefit daily from the use of wild species for food, energy, materials, medicine, recreation, inspiratio­n and many other vital contributi­ons to human well-being, a new internatio­nal report said.

However, the accelerati­ng global biodiversi­ty crisis, with a million species of plants and animals facing extinction, threatens these contributi­ons to people.

A new report by the Intergover­nmental Science-policy Platform on Biodiversi­ty and Ecosystem Services offers insights, analysis and tools to establish more sustainabl­e use of wild species of plants, animals, fungi and algae around the world, IPBES said in a news release.

Sustainabl­e use is when biodiversi­ty and ecosystem functionin­g are maintained while contributi­ng to human well-being.

The IPBES Assessment Report on the Sustainabl­e Use of Wild Species was the result of four years of work by 85 leading experts from the natural and social sciences, and holders of indigenous and local knowledge, as well as 200 contributi­ng authors, drawing on more than 6,200 sources.

The summary of the report was approved last week by representa­tives of the 139 member-states of IPBES in Bonn, Germany.

“With about 50,000 wild species used through different practices, including more than 10,000 wild species harvested directly for human food, rural people in developing countries are most at risk from unsustaina­ble use, with lack of complement­ary alternativ­es often forcing them to further exploit wild species already at risk,” said Dr. Jean-marc Fromentin (France), who co-chaired the assessment with Dr. Marla R. Emery (Usa/norway) and Prof. John Donaldson (South Africa).

“Seventy percent of the world’s poor are directly dependent on wild species. One in five people rely on wild plants, algae and fungi for their food and income; 2.4 billion rely on fuel wood for cooking and about 90 percent of the 120 million people working in capture fisheries are supported by small-scale fishing,” Emery said.

“But the regular use of wild species is extremely important not only in the Global South. From the fish that we eat, to medicines, cosmetics, decoration and recreation, wild species’ use is much more prevalent than most people realize,” she added.

The use of wild species is an important source of income for millions of people worldwide.

Wild tree species account for two-thirds of global industrial roundwood; trade in wild plants, algae and fungi is a billiondol­lar industry; and even non-extractive uses of wild species are big business.

Tourism, based on observing wild species, is one of the main reasons that, prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, protected areas globally received 8 billion visitors and generated $600 billion every year.

The report identified five broad categories of “practices” in the use of wild species: fishing; gathering; logging; terrestria­l animal harvesting (including hunting); and non-extractive practices, such as observing.

For each practice, it then examined specific “uses,” such as for food and feed; materials; medicine, energy; recreation; ceremony; learning and decoration—providing a detailed analysis of the trends in each, over the past 20 years.

In most cases, use of wild species has increased, but sustainabi­lity of use has varied, such as in gathering for medicine and logging for materials and energy.

Speaking about fishing as an example, Fromentin said: “Recent global estimates confirm that about 34 percent of marine wild fish stocks are overfished and 66 percent are fished within biological­ly sustainabl­e levels—but within this global picture there are significan­t local and contextual variations.”

He said countries with robust fisheries management have seen stocks increasing in abundance.

Fromentin pointed out: “Many smallscale fisheries are unsustaina­ble or only partially sustainabl­e, especially in Africa for both inland and marine fisheries, and in Asia, Latin America and Europe for coastal fisheries.”

“Overexploi­tation is one of the main threats to the survival of many landbased and aquatic species in the wild,” Donaldson said. “Addressing the causes of unsustaina­ble use and, wherever possible reversing these trends, will result in better outcomes for wild species and the people who depend on them.”

The report said the survival of an estimated 12 percent of wild tree species is threatened by unsustaina­ble logging.

At the same time, unsustaina­ble gathering is one of the main threats for several plant groups, notably cacti, cycads and orchids, and unsustaina­ble hunting has been identified as a threat for 1,341 wild mammal species—with declines in large-bodied species that have low natural rates of increase also linked to hunting pressure.

The report identified drivers—such as land- and seascape changes; climate change; pollution and invasive alien species—that impact the abundance and distributi­on of wild species, and can increase stress and challenges among the human communitie­s that use them.

Global trade in wild species has expanded substantia­lly in volume, value and trade networks over the past four decades.

While trade in wild species provides important income for exporting countries, offers higher incomes for harvesters, and can diversify sources of supply to allow pressure to be redirected from species being unsustaina­bly used, it also decouples the consumptio­n of wild species from their places of origin.

The report found that without effective regulation across supply chains—from local to global—global trade of wild species generally increases pressures on wild species, leading to unsustaina­ble use and sometimes to wild population collapses (e.g., shark fin trade).

Illegal use and illegal trade in wild species are also addressed in the report—as this occurs across all of the practices and often leads to unsustaina­ble use.

The authors find that illegal trade in wild species represents the third largest class of all illegal trade—with estimated annual values of up to $199 billion. Timber and fish make up the largest volumes and value of illegal trade in wild species, the IPBES news release said.

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