Abstract

Countries that are signatories of the Convention of Biological Diversity are committed to the goal of protecting 17% of their natural ecosystems by 2020. The lack of an up-to-date, operational classification and cartography of regional ecosystems seriously limits the assessment of progress towards this goal. Here, we present a broad ecosystem framework, which combines land use, functional traits of dominant plant species, and climatic factors for the classification of terrestrial ecosystems and apply this framework to classify Chilean terrestrial ecosystems. This new classification is consistent with the recently proposed IUCN framework to assess ecosystem conservation status. Using this framework, we identified and described 30 Chilean terrestrial ecosystems, including land units of natural and anthropogenic origin. We also provide a cartographic representation of ecosystems for land planning purposes and an overall assessment of their conservation status. We evaluated the representation of the 30 ecosystems in the Chilean National System of Protected Areas (NSPA) and in Private Protected Areas (PPA), identifying 15 ecosystems underrepresented (below the 17% target) in the NSPA, in contrast to only 11 when the area of NSPA+PPA was considered. The proposed classification can be broadly applicable to assess the conservation status of ecosystems elsewhere, using similar conceptual and methodological tools. The development of functional ecosystem classifications for different countries must be encouraged to facilitate monitoring of global conservation targets.

Highlights

  • Following Chapin et al (2012), an ecosystem can be defined as a spatially explicit area of land, where exchanges of matter and energy among organisms and between organisms and their physical environment take place

  • We evaluated the representation of the 30 ecosystems in the Chilean National System of Protected Areas (NSPA) and in Private Protected Areas (PPA), identifying 15

  • We evaluate the representation of these ecosystems in the Chilean National System of Protected Areas (NSPA) and Private Protected Areas (PPA) and discuss what is needed to achieve the minimum conservation goal of 17% of underrepresented natural ecosystems

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Summary

Introduction

Following Chapin et al (2012), an ecosystem can be defined as a spatially explicit area of land, where exchanges of matter and energy among organisms (including humans) and between organisms and their physical environment take place. The second half of the 20th century has seen the growth of human impacts to unprecedented levels in the history of the planet (Steffen et al 2011; Corlett 2015), causing major disruptions of the distribution of species and ecosystems (Traill et al 2010; Dirzo et al 2014). These impacts imply a large ‘‘extinction debt’’ (Wearn et al 2012), with gloomy consequences for the provision of ecosystem services to humanity.

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