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The Living Planet Index (LPI) is a leading global biodiversity indicator based on vertebrate population time series. Since it was first developed over 25 years ago, the LPI has been widely used to indicate trends in biodiversity globally, primarily reported every two years in the Living Planet Report. Based on relative abundance, a sensitive metric of biodiversity change, the LPI has also been applied as a tool for informing policy and used in assessments for several multilateral conventions and agreements, including the Convention on Biological Diversity 2010 Biodiversity Target and Aichi targets. Here, we outline all current and some potential uses of the LPI as a policy tool and explore the use of the LPI in policy documents to assess the reach of the LPI geographically and over time. We present limitations to the use of this indicator in policy, primarily relating to the development of the index at the national level, and suggest clear pathways to broaden the utility of the LPI and the underlying database for temporal and spatial predictions of biodiversity change. We also provide evidence that the LPI can detect recoveries in biodiversity and suggest its suitability for measuring progress towards the goal of biodiversity recovery by 2050.This article is part of the discussion meeting issue 'Bending the curve towards nature recovery: building on Georgina Mace's legacy for a biodiverse future'.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2023.0207 | DOI Listing |
Nurs Sci Q
October 2025
Professor, Tan Chingfen Graduate School of Nursing, UMass Chan Medical School, Worcester, MA, USA.
is a unitary conceptualization proposed by Rogerian scholar, Dr. Violet M. Malinski.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLancet Planet Health
August 2025
Observatorio Nacional de Salud, Instituto Nacional de Salud, Bogota 111321, Colombia. Electronic address:
Plant Soil
November 2024
Georgina Mace Centre for the Living Planet, Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College, London, SL5 7PY England.
Aims: Forests across the world are subject to disturbance via wind, wildfire, and pest and disease outbreaks. Yet we still have an incomplete understanding of how these stressors impact forest biota-particularly the soil microbes, which govern forest carbon and nutrient cycling.
Methods: Here, we investigated the impact of a severe windstorm on soil bacterial communities in Kielder Forest, a temperate coniferous forest in the north of England.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl
August 2025
Material Science, BASF SE, Carl-Bosch-Str. 38, D-67056, Ludwigshafen, Germany.
Form is a common and intuitive criterion to distinguish between the realm of living species and the inanimate nature. However, there are in fact no strict boundaries in terms of morphology, as exemplified by so-called chemical gardens, which form by self-assembly in purely inorganic systems and yet closely mimic the appearance of trees and other plants. While such structures have been reported for a broad range of compositions-most notably silicates of various types of metal cations as well as prominent (bio)minerals like calcium carbonate or phosphate-one important material has been missing in the comprehensive list of these chemobrionic systems: calcium sulfate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci
August 2025
IMCS, Rutgers: The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ, USA.
Life is far from thermodynamic equilibrium. Hence, life must extract energy from the environment. On Earth, that energy is driven by networks of metabolic reactions in all cells which ultimately move electrons and protons (i.
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