Shepherding Sub-Saharan Africa's Wildlife Through Peak Anthropogenic Pressure Toward a Green Anthropocene

Author:

Lindsey P.A.123,Anderson S.H.4,Dickman A.5,Gandiwa P.6,Harper S.7,Morakinyo A.B.8,Nyambe N.9,O'Brien-Onyeka M.10,Packer C.11,Parker A.H.12,Robson A.S.13,Ruhweza Alice14,Sogbohossou E.A.1516,Steiner K.W.17,Tumenta P.N.18

Affiliation:

1. Mammal Research Institute, Department of Zoology and Entomology, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa;

2. Environmental Futures Research Institute, Griffith University, Nathan, Queensland, Australia

3. Wildlife Conservation Network, San Francisco, California, USA

4. Carbon Tanzania, Arusha, Tanzania

5. Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Tubney, United Kingdom

6. International Conservation Affairs Department, Parks and Wildlife Management Authority, Harare, Zimbabwe

7. Oxford Institute of Population Ageing, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom

8. Africa Nature Investors, Lagos, Nigeria

9. Kavango Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area, Kasane, Botswana

10. Independent Consulting, Nairobi, Kenya

11. Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA

12. Conserve Global, Johannesburg, South Africa

13. Institute for Communities and Wildlife in Africa, Department of Biological Science, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa

14. WWF Africa, Nairobi, Kenya

15. Laboratory of Applied Ecology, University of Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou, Benin

16. Department of Environment, Senghor University, Alexandria, Egypt

17. Independent Consulting, Johannesburg, South Africa

18. Department of Forestry, University of Dschang, Dschang, Cameroon

Abstract

Sub-Saharan Africa's (SSA's) iconic biodiversity is of immense potential global value but is jeopardized by increasing anthropogenic pressures. Elevated consumption in wealthier countries and the demands of international corporations manifest in significant resource extraction from SSA. Biodiversity in SSA also faces increasing domestic pressures, including rapidly growing human populations. The demographic transition to lower fertility rates is occurring later and slower in SSA than elsewhere, and the continent's human population may quadruple by 2100. SSA's biodiversity will therefore pass through a bottleneck of growing anthropogenic pressures, while also experiencing intensifying effects of climate change. SSA's biodiversity could be severely diminished over the coming decades and numerous species pushed to extinction. However, the prospects for nature conservation in SSA should improve in the long term, and we predict that the region will eventually enter a Green Anthropocene. Here, we outline critical steps needed to shepherd SSA's biodiversity into the Green Anthropocene epoch.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

General Environmental Science

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