Global Biodiversity
Hotspots
Life on Earth faces a crisis of historical and
planetary proportions. Unsustainable consumption in many northern countries and
crushing poverty in the tropics are destroying wild nature. Biodiversity is
besieged.
Extinction is the gravest aspect of the
biodiversity crisis: it is irreversible. While extinction is a natural process,
human impacts have elevated the rate of extinction by at least a thousand,
possibly several thousand, times the natural rate. Mass extinctions of this
magnitude have only occurred five times in the history of our planet; the last
brought the end of the dinosaur age.
In a world where conservation budgets are
insufficient given the number of species threatened with extinction,
identifying conservation priorities is crucial. British ecologist Norman Myers
defined the biodiversity hotspot concept in 1988 to address the dilemma that
conservationists face: what areas are the most immediately important for
conserving biodiversity?
A biodiversity
hotspot is a biogeographic region with a significant
reservoir of biodiversity that is under threat from humans.
The biodiversity hotspots hold especially high
numbers of endemic species, yet their combined area of remaining habitat covers
only 2.3 percent of the Earth's land surface. Each hotspot faces extreme
threats and has already lost at least 70 percent of its original natural
vegetation. Over 50 percent of the world’s plant species and 42 percent of all
terrestrial vertebrate species are endemic to the 34 biodiversity hotspots.
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