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Unshifting the baseline: a framework for documenting historical population changes and assessing long-term anthropogenic impacts

Citation

Rodrigues, ASL and Monsarrat, S and Charpentier, A and Brooks, TM and Hoffmann, M and Reeves, R and Palomares, MLD and Turvey, ST, Unshifting the baseline: a framework for documenting historical population changes and assessing long-term anthropogenic impacts, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 374, (1788) pp. 1-9. ISSN 0962-8436 (2019) [Refereed Article]

Copyright Statement

Copyright 2019 The Authors

DOI: doi:10.1098/rstb.2019.0220

Abstract

Ecological baselines—reference states of species' distributions and abundances—are key to the scientific arguments underpinning many conservation and management interventions, as well as to the public support to such interventions. Yet societal as well as scientific perceptions of these baselines are often based on ecosystems that have been deeply transformed by human actions. Despite increased awareness about the pervasiveness and implications of this shifting baseline syndrome, ongoing global assessments of the state of biodiversity do not take into account the long-term, cumulative, anthropogenic impacts on biodiversity. Here, we propose a new framework for documenting such impacts, by classifying populations according to the extent to which they deviate from a baseline in the absence of human actions. We apply this framework to the bowhead whale (Balaena mysticetus) to illustrate how it can be used to assess populations with different geographies and timelines of known or suspected impacts. Through other examples, we discuss how the framework can be applied to populations for which there is a wide diversity of existing knowledge, by making the best use of the available ecological, historical and archaeological data. Combined across multiple populations, this framework provides a standard for assessing cumulative anthropogenic impacts on biodiversity.

This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘The past is a foreign country: how much can the fossil record actually inform conservation?’

Item Details

Item Type:Refereed Article
Keywords:ecological baselines, epoch assessments, anthropogenic impacts, population depletion, population recovery, shifting baseline
Research Division:Environmental Sciences
Research Group:Environmental management
Research Field:Conservation and biodiversity
Objective Division:Environmental Management
Objective Group:Management of Antarctic and Southern Ocean environments
Objective Field:Assessment and management of Antarctic and Southern Ocean ecosystems
UTAS Author:Brooks, TM (Dr Thomas Brooks)
ID Code:137822
Year Published:2019
Web of Science® Times Cited:27
Deposited By:Sustainable Marine Research Collaboration
Deposited On:2020-03-05
Last Modified:2020-08-20
Downloads:0

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