The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Barely half of UK’S original species remain

- By Sophie Wingate news@sundaypost.com

The UK is one of the world’s most naturedepl­eted countries – and may not have enough biodiversi­ty to prevent an ecological meltdown, according to new data.

The country has an average of only 53% of its biodiversi­ty left, well below the global average of 75%, according to analysis by the Natural History Museum.

Both figures are lower than the 90% average, which experts consider the “safe limit” to prevent the world from tipping into an “ecological recession”

– a future in which ecosystems do not have enough biodiversi­ty to function well, leading to crop failures and infestatio­ns that could cause shortages in food, energy and materials.

Biodiversi­ty represents the variety of plant and animal life on Earth, and scientists say it is dwindling fast.

“Much of the world has lost a large amount of its natural biodiversi­ty,” said Dr

Adriana De Palma, a biodiversi­ty scientist at the museum.

“Those systems have lost enough biodiversi­ty to mean that we have to be careful about relying on them functionin­g in the way that we need them to.”

Researcher­s at the museum have developed the Biodiversi­ty Intactness Index, which measures the percentage of nature that remains in an area.

The UK figure places it in the bottom 10% of the world’s countries and last among the G7 group of nations.

The country’s longtime low position is linked to the industrial revolution, said professor Andy Purvis from the museum’s life sciences department.

“That mechanised the destructio­n of nature to an extent, converting it into goods for profits.”

Prof Purvis added that the UK has seen relatively stable biodiversi­ty levels over

recent years.

 ?? ?? Presenter Chris Packham leads young protesters at Buckingham Palace yesterday to call on the royal family to rewild their estates
Presenter Chris Packham leads young protesters at Buckingham Palace yesterday to call on the royal family to rewild their estates

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