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Land-use change and biodiversity: Challenges for assembling evidence on the greatest threat to nature.

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors employ named entity recognition to analyze more than 4000 abstracts, alongside full reading of 100 randomly selected papers, highlighting the broad range of study designs and methodologies used; the most common being local space-for-time comparisons that classify land use in situ.
Abstract
Land-use change is considered the greatest threat to nature, having caused worldwide declines in the abundance, diversity, and health of species and ecosystems. Despite increasing research on this global change driver, there are still challenges to forming an effective synthesis. The estimated impact of land-use change on biodiversity can depend on location, research methods, and taxonomic focus, with recent global meta-analyses reaching disparate conclusions. Here, we critically appraise this research body and our ability to reach a reliable consensus. We employ named entity recognition to analyze more than 4000 abstracts, alongside full reading of 100 randomly selected papers. We highlight the broad range of study designs and methodologies used; the most common being local space-for-time comparisons that classify land use in situ. Species metrics including abundance, distribution, and diversity were measured more frequently than complex responses such as demography, vital rates, and behavior. We identified taxonomic biases, with vertebrates well represented while detritivores were largely missing. Omitting this group may hinder our understanding of how land-use change affects ecosystem feedback. Research was heavily biased toward temperate forested biomes in North America and Europe, with warmer regions being acutely underrepresented despite offering potential insights into the future effects of land-use change under novel climates. Various land-use histories were covered, although more research in understudied regions including Africa and the Middle East is required to capture regional differences in the form of current and historical land-use practices. Failure to address these challenges will impede our global understanding of land-use change impacts on biodiversity, limit the reliability of future projections and have repercussions for the conservation of threatened species. Beyond identifying literature biases, we highlight the research priorities and data gaps that need urgent attention and offer perspectives on how to move forward.

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Land use optimization of rural production–living–ecological space at different scales based on the BP–ANN and CLUE–S models

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed a multi-scale land use optimization method based on benefit coupling evaluation, BP-ANN and CLUE-S models, which can better meet the land space demand for food security and ecological protection in the future.
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Effects of Trophic Level and Land Use on the Variation of Animal Antibiotic Resistome in the Soil Food Web.

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors characterized the antibiotic resistomes of 495 soil animal samples collected from six regions across China, including two different land uses, and found that the risk of ARGs spreading through the food web is greater in arable than in forest ecosystems.
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Crop visitation by wild bees declines over an 8‐year time series: A dramatic trend, or just dramatic between‐year variation?

TL;DR: In this article , the authors assess changes in bee visitation and net capture rates for 73 species visiting watermelon crop flowers at 19 farms in the mid-Atlantic region of the United States from 2005 to 2012, finding a 58% decline in wild bee visitation to crop flowers, but no significant change in honey bee visitation rate.
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Intensive human land uses negatively affect vertebrate functional diversity.

TL;DR: Using a database describing vertebrate assemblages in different land uses, the authors assess how the type and intensity of land use affect the functional diversity of vertebrates globally, finding that human land uses alter local functional structure by driving declines in functional diversity, with the strongest effects in the most disturbed land uses.
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Assessing ecosystem condition at the national level in Hungary - indicators, approaches, challenges

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors presented methods and experiences of the national-level mapping and assessment of ecosystem condition in Hungary, including all major ecosystem types present, and retrospectively evaluated the six mapping approaches (and the resulting indicators) against the indicator selection criteria suggested in the SEEA-EA.
References
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WorldClim 2: new 1-km spatial resolution climate surfaces for global land areas

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors created a new dataset of spatially interpolated monthly climate data for global land areas at a very high spatial resolution (approximately 1 km2), including monthly temperature (minimum, maximum and average), precipitation, solar radiation, vapour pressure and wind speed, aggregated across a target temporal range of 1970-2000, using data from between 9000 and 60,000 weather stations.
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Global Biodiversity: Indicators of Recent Declines

Stuart H. M. Butchart, +46 more
- 28 May 2010 - 
TL;DR: Most indicators of the state of biodiversity showed declines, with no significant recent reductions in rate, whereas indicators of pressures on biodiversity showed increases, indicating that the Convention on Biological Diversity’s 2010 targets have not been met.
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