Extensive global wetland loss over the past three centuries
Fluet-Chouinard, Etienne; Stocker, Benjamin D.; Zhang, Zhen; Malhotra, Avni; Melton, Joe R.; Poulter, Benjamin; Kaplan, Jed O.; Goldewijk, Kees Klein; Siebert, Stefan; Minayeva, Tatiana; Hugelius, Gustaf; Joosten, Hans; Barthelmes, Alexandra; Prigent, Catherine; Aires, Filipe; Hoyt, Alison M.; Davidson, Nick; Finlayson, C. Max; Lehner, Bernhard; Jackson, Robert B.; McIntyre, Peter B.
(2023) Nature, volume 614, issue 7947, pp. 281 - 286
(Article)
Abstract
Wetlands have long been drained for human use, thereby strongly affecting greenhouse gas fluxes, flood control, nutrient cycling and biodiversity1,2. Nevertheless, the global extent of natural wetland loss remains remarkably uncertain3. Here, we reconstruct the spatial distribution and timing of wetland loss through conversion to seven human land uses between
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1700 and 2020, by combining national and subnational records of drainage and conversion with land-use maps and simulated wetland extents. We estimate that 3.4 million km2 (confidence interval 2.9–3.8) of inland wetlands have been lost since 1700, primarily for conversion to croplands. This net loss of 21% (confidence interval 16–23%) of global wetland area is lower than that suggested previously by extrapolations of data disproportionately from high-loss regions. Wetland loss has been concentrated in Europe, the United States and China, and rapidly expanded during the mid-twentieth century. Our reconstruction elucidates the timing and land-use drivers of global wetland losses, providing an improved historical baseline to guide assessment of wetland loss impact on Earth system processes, conservation planning to protect remaining wetlands and prioritization of sites for wetland restoration4.
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Keywords: Environmental impact, Limnology, Water, Drainage, Present state, Environmental impacts, Database, Long-term, Ecosystem services, Trends, Peatland, Land, Taverne, General
ISSN: 0028-0836
Publisher: Nature Research
Note: Funding Information: Funding for this work was provided by a postgraduate scholarship from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (no. PGSD2-471651-2015), the David and Lucille Packard Fellowship in Science and Engineering and National Science Foundation (grant no. DEB-1115025), a DAAD visit to Bonn Universität and by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation through grant no. GBMF5439 (Advancing Understanding of the Global Methane Cycle) to Stanford University supporting the Methane Budget activity for the Global Carbon Project. B.D.S. was funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation (grant no. PCEFP2_181115). Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.
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