Semantic Scholar Open Access 2021 164 sitasi

Land Use and Ecological Change: A 12,000-Year History

E. Ellis

Abstrak

Human use of land has been transforming Earth's ecology for millennia. From hunting and foraging to burning the land to farming to industrial agriculture, increasingly intensive human use of land has reshaped global patterns of biodiversity, ecosystems, landscapes, and climate. This review examines recent evidence from archaeology, paleoecology, environmental history, and model-based reconstructions that reveal a planet largely transformed by land use over more than 10,000 years. Although land use has always sustained human societies, its ecological consequences are diverse and sometimes opposing, both degrading and enriching soils, shrinking wild habitats and shaping novel ones, causing extinctions of some species while propagating and domesticating others, and both emitting and absorbing the greenhouse gases that cause global climate change. By transforming Earth's ecology, land use has literally paved the way for the Anthropocene. Now, a better future depends on land use strategies that can effectively sustain people together with the rest of terrestrial nature on Earth's limited land.

Topik & Kata Kunci

Penulis (1)

E

E. Ellis

Format Sitasi

Ellis, E. (2021). Land Use and Ecological Change: A 12,000-Year History. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-environ-012220-010822

Akses Cepat

Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2021
Bahasa
en
Total Sitasi
164×
Sumber Database
Semantic Scholar
DOI
10.1146/annurev-environ-012220-010822
Akses
Open Access ✓