澳大利亚的生物多样性危机与生物多样性理事会的必要性

IF 16.4 1区 化学 Q1 CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Jaana Dielenberg, Sarah Bekessy, Graeme S. Cumming, Angela J. Dean, James A. Fitzsimons, Stephen Garnett, Teagan Goolmeer, Lesley Hughes, Richard T. Kingsford, Sarah Legge, David B. Lindenmayer, Catherine E. Lovelock, Rachel Lowry, Martine Maron, Jessica Marsh, Jan McDonald, Nicola J. Mitchell, Bradley J. Moggridge, Rachel Morgain, Patrick J. O'Connor, Jack Pascoe, Gretta T. Pecl, Hugh P. Possingham, Euan G. Ritchie, Liam D. G. Smith, Rebecca Spindler, Ross M. Thompson, James Trezise, Kate Umbers, John Woinarski, Brendan A. Wintle
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引用次数: 0

摘要

澳大利亚丰富的生物多样性正面临危机澳大利亚是一个生物多样性极为丰富的地区。数百万年的地理隔离造就了高度的物种多样性和特有性。迄今为止,已经描述了 21,000 种植物、8,000 种脊椎动物以及 110,000 种昆虫和其他无脊椎动物(Chapman,2009 年)。在澳大利亚,93% 的开花植物、80% 的无脊椎动物、87% 的哺乳动物、93% 的爬行动物、94% 的蛙类、74% 的淡水鱼类和 50% 的温带海洋鱼类在其他任何地方都找不到(Lintermans 2013; Cresswell & Murphy 2017)。自欧洲殖民以来,澳大利亚丰富的生物多样性迅速衰退。造成这种衰退的原因包括:为农业和城市化而开垦土地,导致栖息地遭到破坏和支离破碎;引进外来植物、动物和疾病;破坏原住民的乡村管理方式,包括火灾管理;以及取水,包括对淡水生态系统的改造和管理。目前,气候变化正在加剧这些压力。100 种澳大利亚物种已被正式确认为灭绝物种,其中包括 34 种哺乳动物,占欧洲人抵达时澳大利亚特有哺乳动物的 10%。22 种淡水鱼类在未来 20 年内极有可能灭绝(Lintermans 等人,2020 年)。全国共有 1,995 个分类群被列为濒临灭绝的物种(澳大利亚政府,2023 年),在州和地区一级还有数百个分类群被列为濒临灭绝的物种。由于分类学尚未解决(发现的新物种已经灭绝)、缺乏对大多数物种和生态系统的系统和严格监测以及对灭绝的报告不足,情况可能比报告的要糟糕得多。物种减少的趋势没有减弱。自 1995 年以来,濒危鸟类的种群数量平均减少了一半(47%),濒危植物的种群数量平均减少了近四分之一(73%)(濒危物种指数 2022)。在过去的 15 年中,有三种脊椎动物物种被宣布灭绝:圣诞岛琵鹭(Pipistrellus murrayi)、圣诞岛森林鸽(Emoia nativitatis)和布兰布尔礁绒鼠(MELOMYS rubicola)。另有 16 个脊椎动物类群有 50%的可能性已经灭绝,其中 4 个类群几乎肯定已经灭绝(Garnett 等,2022 年)。这些事件包括:估计有 30 亿只脊椎动物和 600 亿只无脊椎动物在黑夏大火中丧生或流离失所;大堡礁在过去七年中发生了四次大规模珊瑚漂白事件;墨累-达令盆地发生了多起大规模鱼类死亡事件;作为重要森林授粉者和种子传播者的飞狐和凤头鹦鹉因高温而大量死亡(Legge 等,2023 年)。大多数生态系统正在衰退,17 个生态系统正显示出崩溃的迹象(Bergstrom 等,2021 年),其中包括对卡奔塔利亚海湾鱼类产卵至关重要的红树林,以及维多利亚州的高大湿润森林,其碳储存量超过地球上任何其他森林(Keith 等,2009 年)。自 2012 年巨型海藻森林被列为濒危物种以来,其面积持续减少,目前仅剩不到 5%,而这一生态系统曾广泛分布于澳大利亚东南部沿海水域。澳大利亚 95% 的贝类珊瑚礁(Gillies 等,2018 年)和海草总面积的一半已被破坏。生态系统过程正在被迅速侵蚀,本地物种的授粉、通过挖掘进行的土壤翻新、水过滤和碳封存都已耗尽(Bergstrom 等,2021 年)。极端气候事件(2011 年至 2017 年)导致澳大利亚 45% 以上的海岸线上的主要海洋生境形成生物--珊瑚、海带、海草和红树林--突然大面积死亡(Babcock 等,2019 年)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Australia's biodiversity crisis and the need for the Biodiversity Council

Australia's Rich Biodiversity is in Crisis

Australia is a mega-biodiverse region. Millions of years of geographical isolation have resulted in high species diversity and endemism. So far, >21 000 species of plants, 8000 species of vertebrates, and 110 000 species of insects and other invertebrates have been described (Chapman 2009). An exceptionally high percentage are endemic; 93% of flowering plants, >80% of invertebrates, 87% of mammals, 93% of reptiles, 94% of frogs, 74% of freshwater fishes and >50% of temperate marine fishes in Australia are found nowhere else (Lintermans 2013; Cresswell & Murphy 2017).

Since European colonisation, Australia's rich biodiversity has been in rapid decline. This decline has been driven by habitat destruction and fragmentation due to land clearing for agriculture and urbanisation; the introduction of invasive plants, animals, and diseases; the disruption of First Peoples practices in caring for Country, including fire management; and the extraction of water including the modification and regulation of freshwater ecosystems. These pressures are now being exacerbated by climate change.

One hundred Australian species have been formally recognised as extinct including 34 mammal species, representing 10% of Australia's endemic mammals at the time of European arrival. Twenty-two freshwater fish species are at high risk of extinction within the next 20 years (Lintermans et al2020). One thousand, nine hundred and ninety-five taxa are nationally listed as threatened with extinction (Australian Government 2023) and hundreds more at State and Territory levels. Many once widespread species that are important ecosystem engineers, such as digging mammals, now persist only in small fragments of former natural ranges.

The situation is likely far worse than reported, due to unresolved taxonomy (new species being discovered that are already extinct), a lack of systematic and rigorous monitoring of most species and ecosystems, and under-reporting of extinction. Declines are not abating. Population sizes of threatened birds have declined to half (47%), and threatened plants to almost one quarter (73%) of their populations, on average, since 1995 (Threatened Species Index 2022). Three vertebrate species have been declared extinct in the last fifteen years: the Christmas Island PIPISTRELLE (Pipistrellus murrayi), Christmas Island FOREST SKINK (Emoia nativitatis) and Bramble Cay melomys (MELOMYS rubicola). There is a > 50% likelihood that a further 16 vertebrate taxa, for which there have been no recent verified records, are already extinct, with four almost certainly extinct (Garnett et al2022).

Mass mortality events are increasing. These include an estimated 3 billion vertebrate animals and 60 billion invertebrate animals which were killed or displaced in the Black Summer fires; four mass coral bleaching events on the Great Barrier Reef in the past seven years; multiple major fish kills in the Murray-Darling Basin; and extensive heat-related mortality in flying foxes and cockatoos which are important forest pollinators and seed dispersers (Legge et al2023). Feral and free-roaming cats and foxes kill more than 2.6 billion vertebrate animals every year, with the vast majority being native species (Stobo-Wilson et al2022).

Most ecosystems are in decline and 17 are showing signs of collapse (Bergstrom et al2021), including mangroves critical for fish spawning in the Gulf of Carpentaria, and the tall wet forests of Victoria that store more carbon than any other forest on the planet (Keith et al2009). Since giant kelp forests were listed as Endangered in 2012, declines have continued and less than 5% of this ecosystem, that was widespread in coastal waters of southeastern Australia, remains. Ninety-five per cent of Australian shellfish reefs (Gillies et al2018) and half of our total seagrass area have been destroyed. Ecosystem processes are being eroded rapidly, with pollination by native species, soil turnover through digging, water filtration, and carbon sequestration all much depleted (Bergstrom et al2021). Extreme climatic events (2011 to 2017) have led to abrupt and extensive mortality of key marine habitat-forming organisms—corals, kelps, seagrasses, and mangroves—along over 45% of the Australian coastline (Babcock et al2019).

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来源期刊
Accounts of Chemical Research
Accounts of Chemical Research 化学-化学综合
CiteScore
31.40
自引率
1.10%
发文量
312
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Accounts of Chemical Research presents short, concise and critical articles offering easy-to-read overviews of basic research and applications in all areas of chemistry and biochemistry. These short reviews focus on research from the author’s own laboratory and are designed to teach the reader about a research project. In addition, Accounts of Chemical Research publishes commentaries that give an informed opinion on a current research problem. Special Issues online are devoted to a single topic of unusual activity and significance. Accounts of Chemical Research replaces the traditional article abstract with an article "Conspectus." These entries synopsize the research affording the reader a closer look at the content and significance of an article. Through this provision of a more detailed description of the article contents, the Conspectus enhances the article's discoverability by search engines and the exposure for the research.
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