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Auteur Davnah Urbach |
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Scientists' warning of threats to mountains / Dirk S. Schmeller in Science of the total environment, 853 (20 December 2022)
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Titre : Scientists' warning of threats to mountains Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Dirk S. Schmeller ; Davnah Urbach ; Kieran A. Bates ; Jordi Catalán ; Dan Cogălniceanu ; Matthew C. Fisher ; Jan Friesen ; Leopold Füreder ; Veronika Gaube ; Marilen Haver ; Dean Jacobsen ; Gaël Le Roux (1978-) ; Yu-Pin Lin ; Adeline Loyau ; Oliver Machate ; Andreas Mayer ; Ignacio Palomo ; Christoph Plutzar ; Hugo Sentenac ; Ruben Sommaruga ; Rocco Tiberti ; William Ripple Année de publication : 2022 Article en page(s) : 158611 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [LOTERRE-Biodiversité] Montagne
[LOTERRE-Biodiversité] Changement climatique
[LOTERRE-Biodiversité] Relation homme-environnement
[CBNPMP-Thématique] Enjeux de conservation des lacs d'altitudeRésumé : Mountains are an essential component of the global life-support system. They are characterized by a rugged, heterogenous landscape with rapidly changing environmental conditions providing myriad ecological niches over relatively small spatial scales. Although montane species are well adapted to life at extremes, they are highly vulnerable to human derived ecosystem threats. Here we build on the manifesto ‘World Scientists' Warning to Humanity’, issued by the Alliance of World Scientists, to outline the major threats to mountain ecosystems. We highlight climate change as the greatest threat to mountain ecosystems, which are more impacted than their lowland counterparts. We further discuss the cascade of “knock-on” effects of climate change such as increased UV radiation, altered hydrological cycles, and altered pollution profiles; highlighting the biological and socio-economic consequences. Finally, we present how intensified use of mountains leads to overexploitation and abstraction of water, driving changes in carbon stock, reducing biodiversity, and impacting ecosystem functioning. These perturbations can provide opportunities for invasive species, parasites and pathogens to colonize these fragile habitats, driving further changes and losses of micro- and macro-biodiversity, as well further impacting ecosystem services. Ultimately, imbalances in the normal functioning of mountain ecosystems will lead to changes in vital biological, biochemical, and chemical processes, critically reducing ecosystem health with widespread repercussions for animal and human wellbeing. Developing tools in species/habitat conservation and future restoration is therefore essential if we are to effectively mitigate against the declining health of mountains. Lien pérenne : DOI : 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.158611 / HAL : hal-03795426v1 Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=152131
in Science of the total environment > 853 (20 December 2022) . - 158611Schmeller, Dirk S., Urbach, Davnah, Bates, Kieran A., Catalán, Jordi, Cogălniceanu, Dan, Fisher, Matthew C., Friesen, Jan, Füreder, Leopold, Gaube, Veronika, Haver, Marilen, Jacobsen, Dean, Le Roux, Gaël (1978-), Lin, Yu-Pin, Loyau, Adeline, Machate, Oliver, Mayer, Andreas, Palomo, Ignacio, Plutzar, Christoph, Sentenac, Hugo, Sommaruga, Ruben, Tiberti, Rocco, Ripple, William 2022 Scientists' warning of threats to mountains. Science of the total environment, 853: 158611.Documents numériques
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