We've lost a fifth of our wetlands in the last 300 years

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Australia; International; NSW
Photo by James Park on Unsplash
Photo by James Park on Unsplash

A fifth of the wetlands that existed across the world in the year 1700 have been lost to human activities, according to international and Australian researchers. The team combined over 3,000 international and regional records of wetland drainage and land conversion across 154 countries to estimate a total of 3.4 million square kilometres have been lost since 1700 - about 21%. Much of this loss occurred in Europe, China and the US with conversion to crops and urban development the most common causes. In an accompanying opinion article, an Australian author explains why this estimate is accurate, and how it can help conservation efforts.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Environment: Extensive wetland losses in past three centuries (N&V)

The world lost about 20% of its natural wetlands between 1700 and 2020, according to a study published in Nature this week. The findings may provide a basis for assessing the impact of wetland loss on the wider environment.

Wetlands provide important ecosystem services but are often drained and converted for urbanization or agricultural development. It has been challenging to adequately map wetland loss at a global scale. Previous research has suggested that at least 50% of wetland has been lost since 1900, although estimates range between 28% and 87% net loss since 1700. Such a wide range of figures makes it difficult to assess the environmental impact of wetland conversion.

Etienne Fluet-Chouinard and colleagues reconstruct the timing and spatial distribution of wetland loss due to human intervention by combining 3,320 international and regional records of wetland drainage and land conversion from 154 countries with existing data on land usage and simulated wetland extent. They estimate that 3.4 million km2 of inland wetlands have been lost since 1700 — a net loss of 21% of global wetlands, which is supported by existing regional estimates of loss. The most common causes of wetland disappearance were drainage for upland crops, conversion to flooded rice fields, and urban development. The drivers for conversion varied by region, and the authors note that wetland loss has been concentrated in Europe, the United States and China.

This study documents an environmental shift at the global scale and could be a crucial resource for monitoring how human activity is influencing environmental change, the authors conclude.

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conference:
Nature
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Charles Sturt University, James Cook University, Stanford University, USA
Funder: Funding for this work was provided by a postgraduate scholarship from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (no. PGSD2-471651-2015), the David and Lucille Packard Fellowship in Science and Engineering and National Science Foundation (grant no. DEB-1115025), a DAAD visit to Bonn Universität and by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation through grant no. GBMF5439 (Advancing Understanding of the Global Methane Cycle) to Stanford University supporting the Methane Budget activity for the Global Carbon Project. B.D.S. was funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation (grant no. PCEFP2_181115).
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