Humanity is now a dominant influence on nature worldwide (well established) {2 .2 .5, 2 .2 .7}, with many impacts having accelerated rapidly in the 20th century (well established) {2 .2 .5 .2} . Humanity has influenced nature significantly since prehistory, both positively (e.g., development of agrobiodiversity) and negatively (e.g., extinction of megafauna and flightless island birds) (well established) {2.2.4, 2.2.5.1}; but nature ? including species, their genes and populations, communities of interacting populations, ecological and evolutionary processes, and the landscapes and ecosystems in which they live is now declining rapidly and many facets of nature have already been much reduced (well established) {2.2.5}, supporting suggestion...
Human alteration of the global environment has triggered the sixth major extinction event in the his...
Humans have dramatic, diverse and far-reaching influences on the evolution of other organisms. Numer...
From the pioneering explorations of Joseph Banks (later a President of the Royal Society), to the pr...
The time is now For decades, scientists have been raising calls for societal changes that will reduc...
The human impact on life on Earth has increased sharply since the 1970s, driven by the demands of a ...
Biodiversity enhances many of nature?s benefits to people, including the regulation of climate and t...
Declining biodiversity and ecosystem functions put many of nature’s contributions to people at risk....
Social scientists are aware that ‘nature’ itself has to be understood in its ‘social quality’. Howev...
Human kind and nature have cohabited harmonically since the prehistory, by being always integrated p...
Social scientists are aware that ‘nature’ itself has to be understood in its ‘social quality’. Howev...
Social scientists are aware that ‘nature’ itself has to be understood in its ‘social quality’. Howev...
Social scientists are aware that ‘nature’ itself has to be understood in its ‘social quality’. Howev...
Declining biodiversity and ecosystem functions put many of nature’s contributions to people at risk....
The romanticized view of untouched, pristine nature is fast disappearing. From pollution and defores...
Earth’s biodiversity is the ultimate engine of local and global economies and compromising the renew...
Human alteration of the global environment has triggered the sixth major extinction event in the his...
Humans have dramatic, diverse and far-reaching influences on the evolution of other organisms. Numer...
From the pioneering explorations of Joseph Banks (later a President of the Royal Society), to the pr...
The time is now For decades, scientists have been raising calls for societal changes that will reduc...
The human impact on life on Earth has increased sharply since the 1970s, driven by the demands of a ...
Biodiversity enhances many of nature?s benefits to people, including the regulation of climate and t...
Declining biodiversity and ecosystem functions put many of nature’s contributions to people at risk....
Social scientists are aware that ‘nature’ itself has to be understood in its ‘social quality’. Howev...
Human kind and nature have cohabited harmonically since the prehistory, by being always integrated p...
Social scientists are aware that ‘nature’ itself has to be understood in its ‘social quality’. Howev...
Social scientists are aware that ‘nature’ itself has to be understood in its ‘social quality’. Howev...
Social scientists are aware that ‘nature’ itself has to be understood in its ‘social quality’. Howev...
Declining biodiversity and ecosystem functions put many of nature’s contributions to people at risk....
The romanticized view of untouched, pristine nature is fast disappearing. From pollution and defores...
Earth’s biodiversity is the ultimate engine of local and global economies and compromising the renew...
Human alteration of the global environment has triggered the sixth major extinction event in the his...
Humans have dramatic, diverse and far-reaching influences on the evolution of other organisms. Numer...
From the pioneering explorations of Joseph Banks (later a President of the Royal Society), to the pr...