From as-yet-undiscovered biodiversity to resilient forests and the impact of food consumption on nature: 64 experts, including several from Future Earth, have now published their knowledge and recommendations in the form of “10 Must Knows from Biodiversity Science” for 2024.
The Leibniz Research Network Biodiversity’s new report provides policymakers and society with concrete ways to effectively conserve and sustainably use biodiversity at the local, national, and European levels and thereby also mitigate climate change. With this publication, the researchers contribute current scientific facts to the debate on the German National Biodiversity Strategy, which is to be adopted before the next United Nations Biodiversity Conference in autumn 2024.
“We are already exceeding planetary boundaries, both in terms of global warming and biodiversity loss. Joint responses are needed to counter these crises. We know that preserving biodiversity can significantly contribute to mitigating climate change, for example through biodiverse forests and rewetted peatlands that can act as carbon sinks. Only by focusing on measures to protect biodiversity can we succeed in tackling both crises at the same time,” says Kirsten Thonicke, lead author and Deputy Head of Research Department “Earth System Analysis” at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), which coordinates the research network.
Following the great response to the “10 Must Knows from Biodiversity Science” first published in 2022, scientists from a total of 52 German and international research institutions have now contributed their expertise from the environmental, life, spatial, social, humanities and economic sciences to the new version.
“Our recommendations summarize the research available today for decision-makers. The “Must Knows” are intended to provide guidance on how to implement the globally agreed biodiversity targets in the German context,” says author Sibylle Schroer from the Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries (IGB). Dr. Schroer is also an International Project Officer at Future Earth Global Research Network EvolvES. “This also includes the awareness that so far we only understand a relatively small part of biodiversity. Recognising this fact is a crucial step towards more sustainable environmental policies. These policies should focus on ecosystem-based habitat management – and thus the functions and interactions between species and habitats, rather than just individual species and habitats.”
Concentrated biodiversity knowledge from 64 experts across all disciplines
To implement the 23 global biodiversity targets agreed by United Nations member states at the UN Biodiversity Conference in December 2022 (COP 15), the German National Biodiversity Strategy 2030 is currently being developed. The strategy aims to preserve and protect biodiversity in Germany. In order to provide up-to-date facts from the scientific community, the first version of the “10 Must Knows” from 2022 was expanded to include numerous aspects and brought up to date with the help of current literature. The new report addresses, among other things, how the impact of food consumption on biodiversity can be reduced in concrete terms: “Understanding and using biodiversity as a crucial production factor can help to stabilize yields, enhance agricultural resilience and turn us all into biodiversity managers, whether we are producers or consumers,” says author Jens Freitag from the Leibniz Institute of Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research (IPK). The authors offer practical suggestions for policymakers and provide citizens with specific options for taking action in society.
The BMBF Research Initiative for the Conservation of Biodiversity (FEdA) and the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig collaborated on the project. The “10 Must Knows” were commented on by experts from politics, administration, science and associations before publication.
The “10 Must Knows from Biodiversity Science 2024” are:
- Achieving climate and biodiversity protection together
- Enabling a healthy life on a healthy planet
- Considering undiscovered biodiversity
- Linking linguistic, cultural and biological diversity
- Harmonising the diverse use of forest ecosystems and biodiversity conservation
- Transforming agricultural and food systems
- Protecting land and resources
- Releasing transformative change through international collaboration and Education for Sustainable Development
- Ensuring free access and open use of biodiversity-related data
- Reducing biodiversity impacts from food consumption
Experts from Future Earth who contributed to the report include:
- Sibylle Schroer, EvolvES
- Cornelia Krug, bioDISCOVERY
- Giles Sioen, Health Knowledge-Action Network and Future Earth Secretariat
- Chadia Wannous, Health Knowledge-Action Network and oneHEALTH
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