Saving What Remains


 

"HOT-SPOTS"

"Hot-spots" are biologically rich areas with high diversity and a large percentage of endemic species. For example, 20% of the world's plants are found on 0.5% of the earth's surface. Biological hot-spots include the Western Amazon (Colombia, Ecuador, Peru), Madagascar, North and eastern Borneo, Northeastern Australia, West Africa, and the Brazilian Atlantic forrest. All of these areas have high diversity and many are threatened by human activities.

Global Biodiversity Hotspots

1. The Tropical Andes (Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia)
2. Madagascar
3. Brazil's Atlantic Forest Region
4. The Philippines
5. Meso-American forests
6. Wallacea (eastern Indonesia)
7. Western Sunda (in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Brunei)
8. South Africa's Cape floristic region
9. The Antilles
10. Brazil's Cerrado
11. The Darién and Chocó of Panama, Colombia, and Western Ecuador
12. Polynesia and Micronesian Island complex, including Hawaii
13. Southwestern Australia
14. The Eastern Mediterranean region
15. The Western Ghats of India and the island of Sri Lanka
16. The Guinean forests of West Africa
17. New Caledonia
18. Eastern Himalayas
19. Southeastern Australia and Tasmania

The WWF "Global 200"

In 1998, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) devised a conservation strategy to replace the biodiversity hot-spots first set forth by Myers 1977. The "Global 200," as the strategy is known, expands the world's global conservation priorities to 233 eco-regions, comprising Earth's 19 terrestrial, freshwater, and marine major habitat types. By preserving these eco-regions, the majority of Earth's biological diversity would be protected. For a complete listing of the Global 200, see Appendix 2.

   

Previous

Solutions Introduction
Sustainable Forest Products
Large-scale Forest Products
Medicinal Drugs
Logging
Logging (con't)
Oil
Conservation Priorities
Reserve Size & Valuation
Organization
Intergovernmental Institutions
Communication, Education
Indigenous people
- - - -
References (1)
References (3)
References (5)

Sustainable Dev - Agriculture
Eco-tourism
Foods & Genetic Diversity
Medicinal Drugs & Pesticides
Logging (con't)
Cattle
Increasing Productivity
Types of Reserves
Funding
Developing nations
NGOs
International Organizations
Conclusion
- - - -
References (2)
References (4)
References (6)

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Copyright Rhett Butler 1994-2005