Authors
Steven J Cooke, Morgan L Piczak, Elizabeth A Nyboer, Fernanda Michalski, Abigail Bennett, Aaron A Koning, Kathy A Hughes, Yushun Chen, Jinming Wu, Ian G Cowx, Lois Koehnken, Rajeev Raghavan, Paulo S Pompeu, Sui Phang, John Valbo-Jørgensen, Mette Bendixen, Aurora Torres, Abebe Getahun, G Mathias Kondolf, Michael C Acreman, Andrew M Song, William W Taylor
Publication date
2023/8/2
Source
Environmental Reviews
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Description
For millennia humans have extracted biological and physical resources from the planet to sustain societies and enable the development of technology and infrastructure. Growth in the human population and changing consumption patterns have increased the human footprint on ecosystems and their biodiversity, including in fresh waters. Freshwater ecosystems and biodiversity face many threats and it is now widely accepted that we are in a biodiversity crisis. One means of protecting and restoring freshwater biodiversity is to better manage the exploitation of freshwater biota and aggregate resources (e.g., sand, gravel, and boulders). Here we outline the threats arising from such exploitation and identify response options to ensure that methods and levels of extraction are sustainable and allow recovery of over-exploited freshwater biodiversity and ecosystems. The guidance we provide will enable practitioners …
Total citations
2023202433