Author Correction: Anthropogenic modification of forests means only 40% of remaining forests have high ecosystem integrity

Autor: Jan Robinson, J. Radachowsky, Joe Walston, Stephanie Wang, Elizabeth Dow Goldman, Stacy D. Jupiter, Robert Tizard, M. Callow, C. Samper, Kendall R. Jones, A. DeGemmis, Tom D. Evans, Hawthorne L. Beyer, Bernardo B. N. Strassburg, T. Tear, Hugh P. Possingham, Andrew J. Hansen, Paul R. Elsen, Russell A. Mittermeier, Scott J. Goetz, E. Hofsvang, Patrick Jantz, Yadvinder Malhi, Aurélie Shapiro, James E. M. Watson, A. Kang, Richard N. Taylor, P. Franco, Penny F. Langhammer, H. M. Costa, Piero Visconti, Adam Duncan, Sassan Saatchi, Justina C. Ray, J. Silverman, M. Mendez, Susan Lieberman, William F. Laurance, Matthew Linkie, Sean L. Maxwell, T. Stevens, Jamison Ervin, Emma J. Stokes, Hedley S. Grantham, Tom Clements, Nicholas J. Murray, Richard Schuster, Oscar Venter
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Zdroj: Nature Communications
Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-1 (2021)
ISSN: 2041-1723
Popis: Many global environmental agendas, including halting biodiversity loss, reversing land degradation, and limiting climate change, depend upon retaining forests with high ecological integrity, yet the scale and degree of forest modification remain poorly quantified and mapped. By integrating data on observed and inferred human pressures and an index of lost connectivity, we generate a globally consistent, continuous index of forest condition as determined by the degree of anthropogenic modification. Globally, only 17.4 million km
Databáze: OpenAIRE