Agricultural expansion in Uruguayan grasslands and priority areas for vertebrate and woody plant conservation

Habitat loss due to land-use change is the greatest threat to biodiversity on a global scale, and agriculture has been the principal driver of change. In Uruguay, the conversion of native grasslands to croplands (e.g., soybean) and exotic forest plantations (Eucalyptus and Pinus) has accelerated dur...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alejandro Brazeiro, Marcel Achkar, Carolina Toranza, Lucía Bartesaghi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2020-03-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol25/iss1/art15/
_version_ 1831569992910372864
author Alejandro Brazeiro
Marcel Achkar
Carolina Toranza
Lucía Bartesaghi
author_facet Alejandro Brazeiro
Marcel Achkar
Carolina Toranza
Lucía Bartesaghi
author_sort Alejandro Brazeiro
collection DOAJ
description Habitat loss due to land-use change is the greatest threat to biodiversity on a global scale, and agriculture has been the principal driver of change. In Uruguay, the conversion of native grasslands to croplands (e.g., soybean) and exotic forest plantations (Eucalyptus and Pinus) has accelerated during the last two decades. We studied the vulnerability of vertebrate and woody plant diversity to the loss of grassland areas, driven by agricultural and forestry expansion, to identify priority areas for conservation. We assessed the spatial variability of biodiversity vulnerability in function of species richness and number of focal species (i.e., prioritized species) of woody plants and terrestrial vertebrates that use grassland ecosystem as habitat. The top 17% of vulnerable sites (51 of 302 cells) were selected as priority conservation areas for Uruguay, following Aichi Target number 11. Approximately 36 % of the original continental territory of Uruguay, mainly grasslands, was converted to cropland (28%) and exotic forest plantations (8%) in 2015. Approximately 27% of the priority cells for conservation of vertebrates and woody plant diversity have been transformed, especially in three ecoregions in which habitat loss was between 35-45%. We simulated a land-use scenario for 2030, based on national production goals of soybean and exotic forest plantations, projecting that: (1) the overall loss of original habitat (mainly grasslands) would reach 48% of the country's land area, and (2) 45% of the priority cells would be converted to agricultural lands, especially in four ecoregions, with habitat losses greater than 50%. Our results suggest an urgent need to develop strategies to reduce the rate of natural grassland loss in Uruguay, as well as to conserve biodiversity and ecosystem services associated with these systems. Conservation efforts should focus on prioritized cells, especially those with no protection status and a high likelihood of agricultural conversion in 2030, through expanding public and private protected areas and promoting wildlife-friendly agricultural alternatives, such as beef production in natural grasslands.
first_indexed 2024-12-17T12:43:38Z
format Article
id doaj.art-7c8adac0df994d9babee982ee49014e6
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1708-3087
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-17T12:43:38Z
publishDate 2020-03-01
publisher Resilience Alliance
record_format Article
series Ecology and Society
spelling doaj.art-7c8adac0df994d9babee982ee49014e62022-12-21T21:47:50ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872020-03-012511510.5751/ES-11360-25011511360Agricultural expansion in Uruguayan grasslands and priority areas for vertebrate and woody plant conservationAlejandro Brazeiro0Marcel Achkar1Carolina Toranza2Lucía Bartesaghi3Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de la República, UruguayFacultad de Ciencias, Universidad de la República, UruguayFacultad de Ciencias, Universidad de la República, UruguayFacultad de Ciencias, Universidad de la República, UruguayHabitat loss due to land-use change is the greatest threat to biodiversity on a global scale, and agriculture has been the principal driver of change. In Uruguay, the conversion of native grasslands to croplands (e.g., soybean) and exotic forest plantations (Eucalyptus and Pinus) has accelerated during the last two decades. We studied the vulnerability of vertebrate and woody plant diversity to the loss of grassland areas, driven by agricultural and forestry expansion, to identify priority areas for conservation. We assessed the spatial variability of biodiversity vulnerability in function of species richness and number of focal species (i.e., prioritized species) of woody plants and terrestrial vertebrates that use grassland ecosystem as habitat. The top 17% of vulnerable sites (51 of 302 cells) were selected as priority conservation areas for Uruguay, following Aichi Target number 11. Approximately 36 % of the original continental territory of Uruguay, mainly grasslands, was converted to cropland (28%) and exotic forest plantations (8%) in 2015. Approximately 27% of the priority cells for conservation of vertebrates and woody plant diversity have been transformed, especially in three ecoregions in which habitat loss was between 35-45%. We simulated a land-use scenario for 2030, based on national production goals of soybean and exotic forest plantations, projecting that: (1) the overall loss of original habitat (mainly grasslands) would reach 48% of the country's land area, and (2) 45% of the priority cells would be converted to agricultural lands, especially in four ecoregions, with habitat losses greater than 50%. Our results suggest an urgent need to develop strategies to reduce the rate of natural grassland loss in Uruguay, as well as to conserve biodiversity and ecosystem services associated with these systems. Conservation efforts should focus on prioritized cells, especially those with no protection status and a high likelihood of agricultural conversion in 2030, through expanding public and private protected areas and promoting wildlife-friendly agricultural alternatives, such as beef production in natural grasslands.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol25/iss1/art15/agricultural expansionbiodiversity vulnerabilityconservation priorityexotic forest plantationgrasslandssoybean crop
spellingShingle Alejandro Brazeiro
Marcel Achkar
Carolina Toranza
Lucía Bartesaghi
Agricultural expansion in Uruguayan grasslands and priority areas for vertebrate and woody plant conservation
Ecology and Society
agricultural expansion
biodiversity vulnerability
conservation priority
exotic forest plantation
grasslands
soybean crop
title Agricultural expansion in Uruguayan grasslands and priority areas for vertebrate and woody plant conservation
title_full Agricultural expansion in Uruguayan grasslands and priority areas for vertebrate and woody plant conservation
title_fullStr Agricultural expansion in Uruguayan grasslands and priority areas for vertebrate and woody plant conservation
title_full_unstemmed Agricultural expansion in Uruguayan grasslands and priority areas for vertebrate and woody plant conservation
title_short Agricultural expansion in Uruguayan grasslands and priority areas for vertebrate and woody plant conservation
title_sort agricultural expansion in uruguayan grasslands and priority areas for vertebrate and woody plant conservation
topic agricultural expansion
biodiversity vulnerability
conservation priority
exotic forest plantation
grasslands
soybean crop
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol25/iss1/art15/
work_keys_str_mv AT alejandrobrazeiro agriculturalexpansioninuruguayangrasslandsandpriorityareasforvertebrateandwoodyplantconservation
AT marcelachkar agriculturalexpansioninuruguayangrasslandsandpriorityareasforvertebrateandwoodyplantconservation
AT carolinatoranza agriculturalexpansioninuruguayangrasslandsandpriorityareasforvertebrateandwoodyplantconservation
AT luciabartesaghi agriculturalexpansioninuruguayangrasslandsandpriorityareasforvertebrateandwoodyplantconservation