Positive regional species-people correlations: A sampling artefact or a key issue for sustainable development?


Autoria(s): Barbosa, A.M.; Fontaneto, D.; Marini, L.; Pautasso, M.
Data(s)

30/01/2017

30/01/2017

2010

07/10/2016

Resumo

Many studies are documenting positive large-scale species– people correlations (Luck, 2007; Schuldt & Assmann, 2010). The issue is scale dependent: the local association of species richness and people is in many cases a negative one (Pautasso, 2007; Pecher et al., 2010). This biogeographical pattern is thus important for conservation. If species-rich regions are also densely populated, preserving biodiversity becomes more difficult, ceteris paribus, than if species-rich regions were sparsely populated. At the same time, positive, regional species–people correlations are an opportunity for the biodiversity education of the majority of the human population and underline the importance of conservation in human-modified landscapes (e.g. Sheil & Meijaard, 2010; Ward, 2010).

Identificador

Barbosa, A.M.; Fontaneto, D.; Marini, L.; Pautasso, M.Positive regional species-people correlations: A sampling artefact or a key issue for sustainable development?, Animal Conservation, 13, 5, 446-447, 2010.

http://hdl.handle.net/10174/20327

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Idioma(s)

por

Direitos

openAccess

Tipo

article