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A snapshot of biodiversity protection in Antarctica.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Wauchope, Hannah S 
Shaw, Justine D 
Terauds, Aleks 

Abstract

Threats to Antarctic biodiversity are escalating, despite its remoteness and protection under the Antarctic Treaty. Increasing human activity, pollution, biological invasions and the omnipresent impacts of climate change all contribute, and often combine, to exert pressure on Antarctic ecosystems and environments. Here we present a continent-wide assessment of terrestrial biodiversity protection in Antarctica. Despite Antarctic Specially Protected Areas covering less than 2% of Antarctica, 44% of species (including seabirds, plants, lichens and invertebrates) are found in one or more protected areas. However, protection is regionally uneven and biased towards easily detectable and charismatic species like seabirds. Systematic processes to prioritize area protection using the best available data will maximize the likelihood of ensuring long-term protection and conservation of Antarctic biodiversity.

Description

Keywords

Animals, Antarctic Regions, Biodiversity, Birds, Climate Change, Conservation of Natural Resources, Ecosystem, Environmental Pollution, Human Activities, Humans, Invertebrates, Lichens, Plants, Species Specificity

Journal Title

Nat Commun

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2041-1723
2041-1723

Volume Title

10

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC