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Underlying and proximate drivers of biodiversity changes in Mesoamerican biosphere reserves.

Daniel Martín Auliz-OrtizJulieta Benítez-MalvidoVíctor Arroyo-RodríguezRodolfo DirzoMiguel Ángel Pérez-FarreraRoberto Luna-ReyesEduardo MendozaMariana Yólotl Álvarez-AñorveJavier Álvarez-SánchezDulce María Arias-AtaideLuis Daniel Ávila-CabadillaFrancisco BotelloMarco BraaschAlejandro CasasDelfino Álvaro Campos-VillanuevaJosé Rogelio Cedeño-VázquezJosé Cuauhtémoc Chávez-TovarRosamond CoatesYanus Dechnik-VázquezMaría Del Coro ArizmendiPedro Américo D DiasOscar DoradoPaula EnríquezGriselda Escalona-SeguraVerónica Farías-GonzálezMario E FavilaAndrés GarcíaLeccinum Jesús García-MoralesFernando Gavito-PérezHéctor Gómez-DomínguezFernando González-GarcíaArturo González-ZamoraRamón Cuevas-GuzmánEnrique Haro-BelchezArturo Heriberto Hernández-HuertaOmar Hernández-OrdoñezAnna HorváthGuillermo Ibarra-ManríquezPablo Antonio Lavín-MurcioRafael Lira-SaadeKarime López-DíazM Cristina MacSwiney GSalvador MandujanoRubén Martínez-CamiloJosé Guadalupe Martínez-ÁvalosNayely Martínez-MeléndezAlan Monroy-OjedaFrancisco MoraArturo Mora-OlivoCarlos MuenchJuan Luis Peña-MondragónRuth Percino-DanielNeptalí Ramírez-MarcialRafael Reyna-HurtadoErick Rubén Rodríguez-RuízVíctor Sánchez-CorderoIreri Suazo-OrtuñoSergio Alejandro Terán-JuárezIngrid Abril Valdivieso-PérezVivian ValenciaDavid Valenzuela-GalvánJorge Albino Vargas-ContrerasJosé Raúl Vázquez-PérezJorge Humberto Vega-RiveraCrystian Sadiel Venegas-BarreraMiguel Martínez-Ramos
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2024)
Protected areas are of paramount relevance to conserving wildlife and ecosystem contributions to people. Yet, their conservation success is increasingly threatened by human activities including habitat loss, climate change, pollution, and species overexploitation. Thus, understanding the underlying and proximate drivers of anthropogenic threats is urgently needed to improve protected areas' effectiveness, especially in the biodiversity-rich tropics. We addressed this issue by analyzing expert-provided data on long-term biodiversity change (last three decades) over 14 biosphere reserves from the Mesoamerican Biodiversity Hotspot. Using multivariate analyses and structural equation modeling, we tested the influence of major socioeconomic drivers (demographic, economic, and political factors), spatial indicators of human activities (agriculture expansion and road extension), and forest landscape modifications (forest loss and isolation) as drivers of biodiversity change. We uncovered a significant proliferation of disturbance-tolerant guilds and the loss or decline of disturbance-sensitive guilds within reserves causing a "winner and loser" species replacement over time. Guild change was directly related to forest spatial changes promoted by the expansion of agriculture and roads within reserves. High human population density and low nonfarming occupation were identified as the main underlying drivers of biodiversity change. Our findings suggest that to mitigate anthropogenic threats to biodiversity within biosphere reserves, fostering human population well-being via sustainable, nonfarming livelihood opportunities around reserves is imperative.
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