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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Bending the Curve of Global Freshwater Biodiversity Loss: An Emergency Recovery Plan

BioScience 2020 1091 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
David Tickner, Steven J. Cooke, Steven J. Cooke, Steven J. Cooke, Abigail J. Lynch, Abigail J. Lynch, Steven J. Cooke, Jeffrey J. Opperman, Julian D. Olden, Abigail J. Lynch, S. J. Ormerod, Steven J. Cooke, Robin Abell, Steven J. Cooke, Steven J. Cooke, S. J. Ormerod, S. J. Ormerod, Angela H. Arthington, Julian D. Olden, S. J. Ormerod, Ian Harrison, S. J. Ormerod, S. J. Ormerod, Mike Acreman, David Tickner, Steven J. Cooke, Klement Tockner, Steven J. Cooke, Mike Acreman, Ian Harrison, Angela H. Arthington, S. J. Ormerod, S. J. Ormerod, Stuart E. Bunn, Ian Harrison, Steven J. Cooke, James Dalton, S. J. Ormerod, James Dalton, Julian D. Olden, Will Darwall, Ian Harrison, Will Darwall, Gavin Edwards, S. J. Ormerod, Gavin Edwards, Ian Harrison, Julian D. Olden, Kathy A. Hughes, S. J. Ormerod, Kathy A. Hughes, Klement Tockner, Tim Jones, Tim Jones, David Leclère, David Tickner, Abigail J. Lynch, Steven J. Cooke, Philip Leonard, Philip Leonard, Michael E. McClain, Dean Muruven, Dean Muruven, Julian D. Olden, Klement Tockner, David Tickner, S. J. Ormerod, James A. Robinson, Rebecca E. Tharme, Michele Thieme, Klement Tockner, Mark Wright, Mark Wright, Lucy Young, Lucy Young

Summary

This conservation paper synthesizes the state of global freshwater biodiversity loss — with freshwater vertebrate populations declining twice as steeply as terrestrial or marine populations — and proposes an emergency recovery plan including stronger environmental flows, pollution control, and invasive species management.

Study Type Environmental

Despite their limited spatial extent, freshwater ecosystems host remarkable biodiversity, including one-third of all vertebrate species. This biodiversity is declining dramatically: Globally, wetlands are vanishing three times faster than forests, and freshwater vertebrate populations have fallen more than twice as steeply as terrestrial or marine populations. Threats to freshwater biodiversity are well documented but coordinated action to reverse the decline is lacking. We present an Emergency Recovery Plan to bend the curve of freshwater biodiversity loss. Priority actions include accelerating implementation of environmental flows; improving water quality; protecting and restoring critical habitats; managing the exploitation of freshwater ecosystem resources, especially species and riverine aggregates; preventing and controlling nonnative species invasions; and safeguarding and restoring river connectivity. We recommend adjustments to targets and indicators for the Convention on Biological Diversity and the Sustainable Development Goals and roles for national and international state and nonstate actors.

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