Biodiversity Impact Assessment Considering Land Use Intensities and Fragmentation
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31825Dato
2023-11-16Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Scherer, Laura; Rosa, Francesca; Sun, Zhongxiao; Michelsen, Ottar; De Laurentiis, Valeria; Marques, Alexandra; Pfister, Stephan; Verones, Francesca; Kuipers, KoenSammendrag
Land use is a major threat to terrestrial biodiversity.
Life cycle assessment is a tool that can assess such threats and
thereby support environmental decision-making. Within the Global
Guidance for Life Cycle Impact Assessment (GLAM) project, the
Life Cycle Initiative hosted by UN Environment aims to create a
life cycle impact assessment method across multiple impact
categories, including land use impacts on ecosystem quality
represented by regional and global species richness. A working
group of the GLAM project focused on such land use impacts and
developed new characterization factors to combine the strengths of
two separate recent advancements in the field: the consideration of
land use intensities and land fragmentation. The data sets to
parametrize the underlying model are also updated from previous
models. The new characterization factors cover five species groups (plants, amphibians, birds, mammals, and reptiles) and five broad
land use types (cropland, pasture, plantations, managed forests, and urban land) at three intensity levels (minimal, light, and
intense). They are available at the level of terrestrial ecoregions and countries. This paper documents the development of the
characterization factors, provides practical guidance for their use, and critically assesses the strengths and remaining shortcomings.
Forlag
ACS PublicationsSitering
Scherer L, Rosa F, Sun, Michelsen O, De Laurentiis V, Marques A, Pfister S, Verones F, Kuipers. Biodiversity Impact Assessment Considering Land Use Intensities and Fragmentation. Environmental Science and Technology. 2023Metadata
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Copyright 2023 The Author(s)