A new locally collected environmental quality indicator for rainforests

Measuring environmental degradation with bioindicators, landscape metrics, and remote sensing helps understand impact on biota. However, data on anthropogenic pressures such as plant exploitation, poaching and invasive species are crucial. We created an Anthropogenic Influence Index (AII) for medium...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal for nature conservation 2024-12, Vol.82, p.126763, Article 126763
Hauptverfasser: Oliveira, Márcio Leite de, Gorni, Guilherme Rossi, Nascimento, Alessandra Santos, Passos, Fernando de Camargo
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container_issue
container_start_page 126763
container_title Journal for nature conservation
container_volume 82
creator Oliveira, Márcio Leite de
Gorni, Guilherme Rossi
Nascimento, Alessandra Santos
Passos, Fernando de Camargo
description Measuring environmental degradation with bioindicators, landscape metrics, and remote sensing helps understand impact on biota. However, data on anthropogenic pressures such as plant exploitation, poaching and invasive species are crucial. We created an Anthropogenic Influence Index (AII) for medium and large mammals at the Atlantic Forest based on local environmental quality indicators and tested its correlation with existing indices, such as the Global Human Influence Index (GHII), landscape metrics and social-economic indicators. We found no correlation between the AII and the GHII, indicating that remote sensing-collected data may not reflect local and specific anthropogenic impacts on the environment. In addition, there was a correlation between the AII and the Human Development Index, drawing attention to the direct relationship between income, education and life expectancy and the incidence of environmental impacts. Thus, the AII appears to better capture local nuances of environmental impacts, particularly those significant for medium and large mammals, compared to other indicators such as GHII, human density, and landscape metrics.
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subjects anthropogenic activities
Atlantic forest
education
environmental degradation
Environmental indicators
environmental quality
forests
human development
Human impact
humans
income
invasive species
landscapes
longevity
Mammals
natural resources conservation
Rainforest
title A new locally collected environmental quality indicator for rainforests
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