Abstract

Long-term protection is needed to secure threatened freshwater ecosystems and the social and biodiversity values they provide. In the face of existing and future pressures, current approaches to freshwater protection are often inadequate for maintaining ecosystem values into the future. While terrestrial and marine ecosystem protection are well recognized and have area-based protection goals in global conventions, freshwater ecosystem characteristics have remained poorly represented in these goals. Freshwater ecosystems are commonly secondary or unaddressed components of area-based terrestrial protection. The design and management for terrestrial-based protection are generally inadequate for addressing freshwater ecosystem processes and attributes critical for maintaining their natural patterns and the values they provide to people and nature. Given that freshwater-dependent species are declining at a faster rate than marine and terrestrial species, and the reliance and use of freshwater ecosystems by people living around such areas, approaches to protect them must balance the needs of people and nature and accommodate these complexities.

Highlights

  • Freshwater ecosystems cover less than 2% of the surface of the Earth, yet harbor approximately 12% of all known species, including one-third of all vertebrate species [1].Freshwater ecosystems directly or indirectly support most life on Earth and provide goods and services that are critical for economies and the lives and livelihoods of billions of people [2]

  • Define the values supported by freshwater ecosystems identified by society as requiring protection

  • Freshwater ecosystems and the biodiversity and services they provide are the most threatened realm on Earth. This trend will continue without concerted efforts to change and expand how freshwater protection is approached, structured and implemented

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Summary

Introduction

Freshwater ecosystems directly or indirectly support most life on Earth and provide goods and services that are critical for economies and the lives and livelihoods of billions of people [2]. The biodiversity and the goods and services that freshwater ecosystems sustain are at risk. Analyses of 3741 monitored populations across 944 freshwater species of mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fishes indicated an average decline of 84% from 1970–2016, with most declines occurring among amphibians, reptiles, and fishes [3]. Using these data, results of 1406 monitored populations across

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