Extended Data Fig. 6: Estimated recent and future global biodiversity trends that resulted from land-use change for all seven scenarios. | Nature

Extended Data Fig. 6: Estimated recent and future global biodiversity trends that resulted from land-use change for all seven scenarios.

From: Bending the curve of terrestrial biodiversity needs an integrated strategy

Extended Data Fig. 6: Estimated recent and future global biodiversity trends that resulted from land-use change for all seven scenarios.

ae, The trends—for the five different biodiversity aspects—that result from changes in seven biodiversity indicators (see Table 2 for definitions). Indicator values are shown as differences from the 2010 value (which was set to 1); a value of −0.01 means a loss of 1% in: the extent of suitable habitat (a), the wildlife population density (b), the local compositional intactness (c), the regional number of species not already extinct or committed to extinction (d) or the global number of species not already extinct or committed to extinction (e). Indicator values are projected in response to land-use change derived from one source over the historical period (1970–2010, black line; 2010 is indicated with a vertical dashed line) and from four different IIAMs (AIM, GLOBIOM, IMAGE and MAgPIE; thick lines show the mean across models and shading shows the range across models) for each of the seven future scenarios (Table 1).

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