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The Brazilian Cerrado is the second largest biome in Latin America, extending over more than 200 million ha and hosts some of the most intensive agricultural activities for grain and beef production in the world. Because of the biodiversity richness and high levels of endemism, Cerrado is considered one of world's hotspot for biodiversity conservation. The objectives of this study are three-fold: to present a comprehensive division of Cerrado into different ecoregions that reflect the environmental heterogeneity within the biome; to analyze the ecoregions in terms of biophysical characteristics, protected areas, environmental liability in riparian permanent protection areas along watercourses, and priorities for biodiversity conservation; and to rank the ecoregions in terms of endangerment for biodiversity conservation and restoration. A previous study that delineated 22 ecoregions using geomorphology, vegetation, soil, geology, and plant diversity maps was revised using topography, vegetation, precipitation, and soil maps. Our new ecoregion map consists of 19 units that are unique in terms of landscape characteristics and has been adjusted to the current official boundary map of Cerrado. Some of the ecoregions consist of only one geomorphological compartment, whereas others are heterogeneous, consisting of up to eight compartments. Ferralsols comprise the dominant soil type in 14 of the ecoregions. The percentage of protected areas within ecoregions ranges from 1.7% to 51.5%. The most endangered ecoregion, where land use change critically threatens habitat integrity, is the Depressão Cárstica do São Francisco (states of Bahia, Minas Gerais, and Piauí), where environmental liability along riparian permanent protection areas amounts to 85.6% of the total area. Our proposed ecoregion map provides a spatial framework for regional and local assessments to improve decision-making processes to reconcile conservation and restoration planning, sustainable agriculture, and provision of ecosystem services. Besides de adjustment of the previous Cerrado's ecoregion map to the official biome boundary (relevant for the implementation of public policies of conservation as those regulated by the Brazilian Forest Code), the new analyses of the ecoregion map represent a substantial improvement in comparison to the ones conducted by the previous study in 2003. In addition, current web resources allow us to make all the information used or derived from this study available to other users. This opens the possibility of additional improvements of our findings by the scientific community or to be used effectively by decision makers.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2018.11.108 | DOI Listing |
Environ Monit Assess
July 2025
Amity Institute of Environmental Sciences, Amity University Uttar Pradesh, Sector 125, Noida, Uttar Pradesh, 201313, India.
Prompt urbanization is one of the irreversible anthropogenic activities that is a major challenge for ecosystems and climate change. This global challenge needs to be addressed as urbanization significantly affects land surface temperature (LST) and contributes to the urban heat island (UHI) effect. Urban development converts natural landscapes into impermeable surfaces, elevating LST, particularly in densely populated regions where heat-absorbent materials are abundant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Monit Assess
June 2025
ICAR - National Bureau of Fish Genetic Resources, Lucknow, 226002, Uttar Pradesh, India.
Deep pools are perennial habitats in riverine systems that serve as feeding and breeding grounds for diverse aquatic biota, including threatened and endemic fishes. Mapping and understanding the dynamics of deep pools are vital for conservation planning and management, especially in water deficit ecoregions. This study was conducted to assess the temporal trend in the climatic variables and map deep pools in four rivers, viz.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Data
April 2025
Global Science, The Nature Conservancy, Fort Collins, CO, 80521, USA.
Habitat loss and degradation associated with industrial development is the primary threat and dominant driver of biodiversity loss globally. Spatially-explicit datasets that estimate human pressures are essential to understand the extent and rate of anthropogenic impacts on ecosystems and are critical to inform conservation commitments and efforts under the Global Biodiversity Framework. We leveraged the human modification framework to generate comprehensive, consistent, detailed, robust, temporal, and contemporary datasets to map cumulative and individual threats associated with industrial human activities to terrestrial biodiversity and ecosystems from 1990 to 2022.
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February 2025
Thermal/Fluids Science and Engineering, Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, CA, USA.
Peatlands are prevalent across northern regions, including bogs, fens, marshes, meadows, and select tundra wetlands that all vary in size (e.g., 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Appl
January 2025
U.S. Geological Survey, Lower Mississippi-Gulf Water Science Center, Jackson, Mississippi, USA.
Subsidy-stress gradients offer a useful framework for understanding ecological responses to perturbation and may help inform ecological metrics in highly modified systems. Historic, region-wide shifts from bottomland hardwood forest to row crop agriculture can cause positively skewed impact gradients in alluvial plain ecoregions, resulting in tolerant organisms that typically exhibit a subsidy response (increased abundance in response to environmental stressors) shifting to a stress response (declining abundance at higher concentrations). As a result, observed biological tolerance in modified ecosystems may differ from less modified regions, creating significant challenges for detecting biological responses to restoration efforts.
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