Publication | Open Access
Biodiversity Loss Threatens Human Well-Being
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23
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2006
Year
Human activities are rapidly altering ecosystems, reducing biodiversity that underpins essential services such as medicine, food, and water, and thereby threatening human well‑being through disrupted ecosystem processes. The article synthesizes recent literature and assessments on how biodiversity supports ecosystem services and human well‑being. The authors draw on three recent Millennium Ecosystem Assessment reports, compiled by over 1,500 scientists, to update the global understanding of biodiversity’s role and challenges. Land‑cover changes cause species losses and gains, disrupt ecosystem processes that affect human well‑being, and disproportionately harm the poor.
The diversity of life on Earth is dramatically affected by human alterations of ecosystems [ 1]. Compelling evidence now shows that the reverse is also true: biodiversity in the broad sense affects the properties of ecosystems and, therefore, the benefits that humans obtain from them. In this article, we provide a synthesis of the most crucial messages emerging from the latest scientific literature and international assessments of the role of biodiversity in ecosystem services and human well-being. Human societies have been built on biodiversity. Many activities indispensable for human subsistence lead to biodiversity loss, and this trend is likely to continue in the future. We clearly benefit from the diversity of organisms that we have learned to use for medicines, food, fibers, and other renewable resources. In addition, biodiversity has always been an integral part of the human experience, and there are many moral reasons to preserve it for its own sake. What has been less recognized is that biodiversity also influences human well-being, including the access to water and basic materials for a satisfactory life, and security in the face of environmental change, through its effects on the ecosystem processes that lie at the core of the Earth's most vital life support systems ( Figure 1). Three recent publications from the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment [ 2–4], an initiative involving more than 1,500 scientists from all over the world [ 5], provide an updated picture of the fundamental messages and key challenges regarding biodiversity at the global scale. Chief among them are: (a) human-induced changes in land cover at the global scale lead to clear losers and winners among species in biotic communities; (b) these changes have large impacts on ecosystem processes and, thus, human well-being; and (c) such consequences will be felt disproportionately by the poor, who are most vulnerable to the loss of ecosystem services.
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