Wet and Wonderful: The World's Largest Wetlands Are Conservation Priorities

被引:197
|
作者
Keddy, Paul A. [1 ]
Fraser, Lauchlan H. [2 ]
Solomeshch, Ayzik I. [3 ]
Junk, Wolfgang J. [4 ]
Campbell, Daniel R. [5 ]
Arroyo, Mary T. K. [6 ]
Alho, Cleber J. R. [7 ]
机构
[1] SE Louisiana Univ, Dept Biol Sci, Hammond, LA 70402 USA
[2] Thompson Rivers Univ, Kamloops, BC, Canada
[3] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Plant Sci, Davis, CA 95616 USA
[4] Max Planck Inst Evolutionary Biol, Trop Ecol Working Grp, Plon, Germany
[5] Laurentian Univ, Sudbury, ON P3E 2C6, Canada
[6] Univ Chile, Inst Ecol & Biodivers, Fac Sci, Santiago, Chile
[7] Univ Desenvolvimento Estado & Regiao Pantanal, Campo Grande, MS, Brazil
关键词
ecosystem function; ecosystem service; global priority; largest wetlands; wetland conservation; MISSISSIPPI RIVER-BASIN; SPECIES RICHNESS; TROPICAL AFRICA; CARBON; RESTORATION; PEATLANDS; DIVERSITY; AMAZON; BIODIVERSITY; VEGETATION;
D O I
10.1525/bio.2009.59.1.8
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Wetlands perform many essential ecosystem services-carbon storage, flood control, maintenance of biodiversity, fish production, and aquifer recharge, among others-services that have increasingly important global consequences. Like biodiversity hotspots and frontier forests, the world's largest wetlands are now mapped and described by all international team of scientists, highlighting their conservation importance at the global scale. We explore current understanding of some ecosystem services wetlands provide. We selected four of these wetlands (the largest peatland, West Siberian Lowland; the largest floodplain, Amazon River Basin; the least-known wetland, Congo River Basin; and the most heavily developed wetland, Mississippi River Basin), and we illustrate their diversity, emphasizing values and lessons for thinking big in terms of conservation goals. Recognizing the global significance of these wetlands is an important first step toward forging global conservation solutions. Each of the world's largest wetlands requires a basinwide sustainable management strategy built oil new institutional frameworks-at international, national, and regional levels-to ensure provision of their vital services.
引用
收藏
页码:39 / 51
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] History and conservation of Tunisia's largest freshwater wetland: Garaa Sejenane
    Rouissi, Maya
    Muller, Serge D.
    Jilani, Imtinen Ben Haj
    Ghrabi-Gammar, Zeineb
    Paradis, Laure
    Bottollier-Curtet, Marion
    Gerbaud, Eric
    Daoud-Bouattour, Amina
    REVIEW OF PALAEOBOTANY AND PALYNOLOGY, 2018, 257 : 43 - 56
  • [32] Achievements, challenges, and recommendations for waterbird conservation in China's coastal wetlands
    Ma, Zhijun
    Choi, Chi-Yeung
    Gan, Xiaojing
    Li, Jing
    Liu, Yang
    Melville, David S.
    Mu, Tong
    Piersma, Theunis
    Zhang, Zhengwang
    AVIAN RESEARCH, 2023, 14
  • [33] Diversification and community assembly of the world's largest tropical island
    Kennedy, Jonathan D.
    Marki, Petter Z.
    Reeve, Andrew H.
    Blom, Mozes P. K.
    Prawiradilaga, Dewi M.
    Haryoko, Tri
    Koane, Bonny
    Kamminga, Pepijn
    Irestedt, Martin
    Jonsson, Knud A.
    GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2022, 31 (06): : 1078 - 1089
  • [34] 'APOCALYPTIC' FIRES ARE RAVAGING THE WORLD'S LARGEST TROPICAL WETLAND
    Mega, Emiliano Rodriguez
    NATURE, 2020, 586 (7827) : 20 - 21
  • [35] World Heritage, Hydropower, and Earth's Largest Freshwater Fish
    Lee, Dana
    Eschenroeder, Jackman C.
    Baumgartner, Lee J.
    Chan, Bunyeth
    Chandra, Sudeep
    Chea, Seila
    Chea, Sothearoth
    Chhut, Chheana
    Everest, Elizabeth
    Hom, Radong
    Heng, Kong
    Lovgren, Stefan
    Ounboundisane, Sinsamout
    Robinson, Wayne
    Seat, Lykheang
    Soth, Sobot
    Hogan, Zeb S.
    WATER, 2023, 15 (10)
  • [36] Mapping global conservation priorities and habitat vulnerabilities for cave-dwelling bats in a changing world
    Tanalgo, Krizler C.
    Oliveira, Hernani F. M.
    Hughes, Alice Catherine
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2022, 843
  • [37] The Impact of Conservation on the Status of the World's Vertebrates
    Hoffmann, Michael
    Hilton-Taylor, Craig
    Angulo, Ariadne
    Boehm, Monika
    Brooks, Thomas M.
    Butchart, Stuart H. M.
    Carpenter, Kent E.
    Chanson, Janice
    Collen, Ben
    Cox, Neil A.
    Darwall, William R. T.
    Dulvy, Nicholas K.
    Harrison, Lucy R.
    Katariya, Vineet
    Pollock, Caroline M.
    Quader, Suhel
    Richman, Nadia I.
    Rodrigues, Ana S. L.
    Tognelli, Marcelo F.
    Vie, Jean-Christophe
    Aguiar, John M.
    Allen, David J.
    Allen, Gerald R.
    Amori, Giovanni
    Ananjeva, Natalia B.
    Andreone, Franco
    Andrew, Paul
    Aquino Ortiz, Aida Luz
    Baillie, Jonathan E. M.
    Baldi, Ricardo
    Bell, Ben D.
    Biju, S. D.
    Bird, Jeremy P.
    Black-Decima, Patricia
    Blanc, J. Julian
    Bolanos, Federico
    Bolivar-G, Wilmar
    Burfield, Ian J.
    Burton, James A.
    Capper, David R.
    Castro, Fernando
    Catullo, Gianluca
    Cavanagh, Rachel D.
    Channing, Alan
    Chao, Ning Labbish
    Chenery, Anna M.
    Chiozza, Federica
    Clausnitzer, Viola
    Collar, Nigel J.
    Collett, Leah C.
    SCIENCE, 2010, 330 (6010) : 1503 - 1509
  • [38] Evaluating the effectiveness of conservation priorities in mitigating agricultural threats to China's vertebrates
    Yang, Can
    Zhang, Geli
    Zhang, Xi
    Li, Yuzhe
    Li, Zhichao
    Wang, Qinghao
    Dong, Jinwei
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2025, 171
  • [39] 1980s-2010s: The world's largest mangrove ecosystem is becoming homogeneous
    Sarker, Swapan Kumar
    Matthiopoulos, Jason
    Mitchell, Sonia N.
    Ahmed, Zahir Uddin
    Al Mamun, Md. Bashirul
    Reeve, Richard
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2019, 236 : 79 - 91
  • [40] Testing biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationship in the world's largest grassland: overview of the IMGRE project
    Wu, Jianguo
    Naeem, Shahid
    Elser, James
    Bai, Yongfei
    Huang, Jianhui
    Kang, Le
    Pan, Qingmin
    Wang, Qibing
    Hao, Shuguang
    Han, Xingguo
    LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 2015, 30 (09) : 1723 - 1736