Humans Are Driving One Million Species to Extinction. Tollefson, J. 569:171.
Humans Are Driving One Million Species to Extinction [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Landmark United Nations-backed report finds that agriculture is one of the biggest threats to Earth’s ecosystems. [Excerpt] [...] Without drastic action to conserve habitats, the rate of species extinction — already tens to hundreds of times higher than the average across the past ten million years — will only increase, says the analysis. The findings come from a United Nations-backed panel called the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES). According to the report, agricultural activities have had the largest impact on ecosystems that people depend on for food, clean water and a stable climate. [...] The analysis distils findings from nearly 15,000 studies and government reports, integrating information from the natural and social sciences, Indigenous peoples and traditional agricultural communities. It is the first major international appraisal of biodiversity since 2005. Representatives of 132 governments met last week in Paris to finalize and approve the analysis. [...]
@article{tollefsonHumansAreDriving2019,
  title = {Humans Are Driving One Million Species to Extinction},
  author = {Tollefson, Jeff},
  date = {2019-05-06},
  journaltitle = {Nature},
  volume = {569},
  pages = {171},
  doi = {10.1038/d41586-019-01448-4},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-019-01448-4},
  urldate = {2019-05-10},
  abstract = {Landmark United Nations-backed report finds that agriculture is one of the biggest threats to Earth’s ecosystems.

[Excerpt] [...] Without drastic action to conserve habitats, the rate of species extinction — already tens to hundreds of times higher than the average across the past ten million years — will only increase, says the analysis. The findings come from a United Nations-backed panel called the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES).  According to the report, agricultural activities have had the largest impact on ecosystems that people depend on for food, clean water and a stable climate. [...] The analysis distils findings from nearly 15,000 studies and government reports, integrating information from the natural and social sciences, Indigenous peoples and traditional agricultural communities. It is the first major international appraisal of biodiversity since 2005. Representatives of 132 governments met last week in Paris to finalize and approve the analysis. [...]},
  keywords = {~INRMM-MiD:z-L5XTH3PC,agricultural-resources,anthropocene,biodiversity,coupled-human-and-natural-systems,ecosystem-services,forest-resources,global-change,global-scale,ipbes,review,science-policy-interface,science-society-interface,soil-resources,united-nations,water-resources},
  langid = {english}
}

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