Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UN biodiversi­ty report paints bleak picture

Plant, animal species declining due to human population growth, scientists find

- SETH BORENSTEIN

WASHINGTON — Earth is losing plants, animals and clean water at a significan­t rate, according to four new United Nations scientific reports that aim to provide a comprehens­ive and localized look at the state of biodiversi­ty.

Scientists meeting in Colombia issued four regional reports Friday on how well animals and plants are doing in the Americas; Europe and Central Asia; Africa; and the Asia-Pacific area.

Their conclusion after three years of study: Nowhere is doing well.

The Intergover­nmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversi­ty and Ecosystem was about more than just critters, said study team Chairman Robert Watson. It is about keeping Earth livable for humans, because we rely on biodiversi­ty for food, clean water and public health, the prominent British and U.S. scientist said.

“This is underminin­g well-being across the planet, threatenin­g us long-term on food and water,” Watson said in an interview.

Scientists pointed to this week’s death of the last male northern white rhino in Africa, severe declines in the numbers of elephants, tigers and pangolins, but said those are only the most familiar species that are in trouble.

What’s happening is a side effect of the world becoming more crowded with people, Watson said. Humans need more food, more clean water, more energy and more land. And the way society has sought to meet those needs has cut down on biodiversi­ty, he said.

Crucial habitat has been cut apart, alien species have invaded places, chemicals have hurt plants and animals, wetlands and mangroves that clean up pollution are disappeari­ng, and the world’s waters are overfished, he said.

Man-made climate change is getting worse, and global warming will soon hurt biodiversi­ty as much as all the other problems combined, Watson said.

“We keep making choices to borrow from the future to live well today,” said Jake Rice, Canada’s chief government scientist for fisheries and oceans, who co-chaired the Americas report.

Duke University conservati­onist Stuart Pimm, who wasn’t part of the study team, said the reports make sense and are based on well-establishe­d scientific data: “Are things pretty dire? Yes.”

If current trends continue, by the year 2050 the Americas will have 15 percent fewer plants and animals than now. That means there will be 40 percent fewer plants and animals in the Americas than in the early 1700s.

Nearly a quarter of the species that were fully measured are now threatened, Rice said.

And when all of “nature’s contributi­ons” are taken into account, nearly two-thirds are declining and more than onefifth are “decreasing strongly,” Rice said.

In the Asia-Pacific region, if trends continue, there will be no “exploitabl­e fish stocks” for commercial fishing by 2048. Around that same, the region will lose 45 percent of its biodiversi­ty and about 90 percent of its crucial corals, if nothing changes, said Asia co-chairman Sonali Seneratna Sellamuttu, a senior researcher at the Internatio­nal Water Management Institute.

“All major ecosystems are threatened in the region,” she said.

Even though the Europe and Central Asia region appears to be doing the best, Watson said, 28 percent of the species that only live in Europe are now threatened. In the past decade, 42 percent of the land plant and animal species have declined, said Europe co-chairman Mark Rounsevell of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany.

Wetlands have been cut in half since 1970.

Africa could lose half of some bird and mammal species by 2100. And more than 60 percent of the continent’s people depend on natural resources for their livelihood­s, said report co-chairman Luthando Dziba of South African National Parks.

Already more than 20 percent of Africa’s species are threatened, endangered or extinct.

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