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Título: Set ambitious goals for biodiversity and sustainability
Otros títulos: Multiple, coordinated goals and holistic actions are critical
Autor(es): Díaz, Sandra
Zafra Calvo, Noelia
Purvis, Andy
Verburg, Peter H.
Obura, David
Leadley, Paul
Chaplin Kramer, Rebecca
De Meester, Luc
Ehsan, Dulloo
Martín López, Berta
Rebecca, Shaw
Visconti, Piero
Broadgate, Wendy
Bruford, Michael W.
Burgess, Neil D.
Cavender Bares, Jeannine
Declerck, Fabrice
Fernández Palacios, José María
Garibaldi, Lucas Alejandro
Hill, Samantha L.
Isbell, Forest
Khoury, Colin K.
Krug, Cornelia B.
Liu, Jianguo
Maron, Martine
McGowan, Philip J.
Pereira, Henrique M.
Reyes García, Victoria
Rocha, Juan
Rondinini, Carlo
Shannon, Lynne
Shin, Yunne-Jai
Snelgrove, Paul V.
Spehn, Eva M.
Strassburg, Bernardo
Subramanian, Suneetha M.
Tewksbury, Joshua J.
Watson, James E.
Zanne, Amy E.
Fecha de publicación: 23-oct-2020
Editorial: American Association for the Advancement of Science
Citación: Díaz S, Zafra Calvo N, Purvis, A., Garibaldi LA, and et al. (2020) Set ambitious goals for biodiversity and sustainability: Multiple, coordinated goals and holistic actions are critical. Science; 370(6515); 411-413.
Revista: Science
Abstract: Global biodiversity policy is at a crossroads. Recent global assessments of living nature (1, 2) and climate (3) show worsening trends and a rapidly narrowing window for action. The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) has recently announced that none of the 20 Aichi targets for biodiversity it set in 2010 has been reached and only six have been partially achieved (4). Against this backdrop, nations are now negotiating the next generation of the CBD's global goals [see supplementary materials (SM)], due for adoption in 2021, which will frame actions of governments and other actors for decades to come. In response to the goals proposed in the draft post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) made public by the CBD (5), we urge negotiators to consider three points that are critical if the agreed goals are to stabilize or reverse nature's decline. First, multiple goals are required because of nature's complexity, with different facets—genes, populations, species, deep evolutionary history, ecosystems, and their contributions to people—having markedly different geographic distributions and responses to human drivers. Second, interlinkages among these facets mean that goals must be defined and developed holistically rather than in isolation, with potential to advance multiple goals simultaneously and minimize trade-offs between them. Third, only the highest level of ambition in setting each goal, and implementing all goals in an integrated manner, will give a realistic chance of stopping—and beginning to reverse—biodiversity loss by 2050.
Resumen: -
URI: https://science.sciencemag.org/content/370/6515/411
https://science.sciencemag.org/content/370/6515/411#BIBL
http://rid.unrn.edu.ar/handle/20.500.12049/6315
ISSN: 1095-9203
0036-8075
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Este documento es resultado del financiamiento otorgado por el Estado Nacional, por lo tanto queda sujeto al cumplimiento de la Ley N° 26.899


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