Restoring ecosystems to boost biodiversity is an urgent priority--an 'Eco-index' can guide the way
by Kiri Joy Wallace, John Reid and Penny Payne , The Conversation
Biodiversity continues to decline globally, but nowhere is the loss more pronounced than in Aotearoa New Zealand, which has the highest proportion of threatened indigenous species in the world.
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Planning large-scale biodiversity restoration projectswhether they're run by NGOs, governments or Indigenous groupsrequires high-quality data.
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The Eco-index Ecosystem Restoration Map provides New Zealand's first public, open-access digital tool in this area. It aims to address information gaps in biodiversity restoration, and to show users which native ecosystems are appropriate to reconstruct in any given catchment area.
It also shows where the highest restoration priorities aresuch as in areas with very low native ecosystem cover. And it allows anyone to view the restoration targets for each native ecosystem in any catchment.
(More at link)
https://phys.org/news/2023-11-ecosystems-boost-biodiversity-urgent-priorityan.amp