Global impacts of future urban expansion on terrestrial vertebrate diversity

Guangdong Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chuanglin Fang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yingjie Li(Michigan State University), Zhenbo Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Siao Sun(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Sanwei He(Zhongnan University of Economics and Law), Wei Qi(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chao Bao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Haitao Ma(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yupeng Fan(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yuxue Feng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiaoping Liu(Sun Yat-sen University)
Nature Communications
March 25, 2022
Cited by 472Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Rapid urban expansion has profound impacts on global biodiversity through habitat conversion, degradation, fragmentation, and species extinction. However, how future urban expansion will affect global biodiversity needs to be better understood. We contribute to filling this knowledge gap by combining spatially explicit projections of urban expansion under shared socioeconomic pathways (SSPs) with datasets on habitat and terrestrial biodiversity (amphibians, mammals, and birds). Overall, future urban expansion will lead to 11-33 million hectares of natural habitat loss by 2100 under the SSP scenarios and will disproportionately cause large natural habitat fragmentation. The urban expansion within the current key biodiversity priority areas is projected to be higher (e.g., 37-44% higher in the WWF's Global 200) than the global average. Moreover, the urban land conversion will reduce local within-site species richness by 34% and species abundance by 52% per 1 km grid cell, and 7-9 species may be lost per 10 km cell. Our study suggests an urgent need to develop a sustainable urban development pathway to balance urban expansion and biodiversity conservation.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis