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Biodiversity Hotspots Revisited, Conservation International, 2011

Dates

Original Data Basin Creation Date
2013-07-11 18:00:00
Original Data Basin Modified Date
2013-08-02 17:19:38

Summary

The biodiversity hotspots are regions known to hold especially high numbers of species found nowhere else, yet their remaining habitat combined covers a little more than two percent of Earth's land surface. According to the criteria developed by Myers et al. (2000), a hotspot must meet two thresholds in order to qualify: 1) it must have at least 1500 endemic, native vascular plant species, and 2) it must have already lost at least 70% of its primary, native vegetation.Hotspots analysis is in constant evolution. There are two major ways in which hotspots can change over time. The first is a real effect. Threats and their impacts change, meaning that some places may become more threatened while others may recover. The second is that [...]

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Conservation Synthesis, Center for Applied Biodiversity Science at Conservation International
Harvested on Fri May 23 09:35:14 MDT 2014 from Data Basin Service

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UniqueKey Data Basin 23fb5da1586141109fa6f8d45de0a260

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