Publications by authors named "Nicole Shumway"

Article Synopsis
  • Biodiversity offsets are strategies used to balance the negative effects of building or development on nature and wildlife.
  • Experts usually suggest that these offsets should be near the area affected to help similar ecosystems, but sometimes distant offsets are considered.
  • A study on migratory shorebirds showed that while far-off offsets might work better in some cases, there are real risks and challenges in proving they are just as effective as local ones.
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As human activities increasingly threaten biodiversity [1, 2], areas devoid of intense human impacts are vital refugia [3]. These wilderness areas contain high genetic diversity, unique functional traits, and endemic species [4-7]; maintain high levels of ecological and evolutionary connectivity [8-10]; and may be well placed to resist and recover from the impacts of climate change [11-13]. On land, rapid declines in wilderness [3] have led to urgent calls for its protection [3, 14].

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Efforts to conserve biodiversity comprise a patchwork of international goals, national-level plans, and local interventions that, overall, are failing. We discuss the potential utility of applying the mitigation hierarchy, widely used during economic development activities, to all negative human impacts on biodiversity. Evaluating all biodiversity losses and gains through the mitigation hierarchy could help prioritize consideration of conservation goals and drive the empirical evaluation of conservation investments through the explicit consideration of counterfactual trends and ecosystem dynamics across scales.

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