Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6298845 Biological Conservation 2016 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The WET index is a proof-of-concept indicator of global change in wetland area.•Between 1970 and 2008, natural wetlands declined globally on average by about 30%.•Natural wetland extent declined across all five Ramsar regions assessed.•Coastal wetlands declined globally on average more than inland wetlands.

We present a method for estimating broad trends in ecosystem area based on incomplete and heterogeneous data, developing a proof-of-concept for the first indicator of change in area of natural wetland, the Wetland Extent Trends (WET) index. We use a variation of the Living Planet Index method, which is used for measuring global trends in wild vertebrate species abundance. The analysis is based on a database containing 1100 wetland extent time-series records and the method identifies and addresses ecological and biogeographic biases in the dataset. Globally, the natural WET index, excluding human-made wetlands, declined by about 30% on average between 1970 and 2008. Declines varied between regions from about 50% in Europe to about 17% in Oceania over the same period. The WET index fills an important gap in the ecosystem coverage of global biodiversity indicators and can track changes related to a number of current international policy objectives. The same method could be applied to other datasets to create indicators for other ecosystems with incomplete global data.

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