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Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment

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Putting people in the map: anthropogenic biomes of the world

Erle C Ellis1,* and Navin Ramankutty2

1 Department of Geography and Environmental Systems, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD 21250
2 Department of Geography and Earth System Science Program, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada H3A 2K6

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Humans have fundamentally altered global patterns of biodiversity and ecosystem processes. Surprisingly, existing systems for representing these global patterns, including biome classifications, either ignore humans altogether or simplify human influence into, at most, four categories. Here, we present the first characterization of terrestrial biomes based on global patterns of sustained, direct human interaction with ecosystems. Eighteen "anthropogenic biomes" were identified through empirical analysis of global population, land use, and land cover. More than 75% of Earths ice-free land showed evidence of alteration as a result of human residence and land use, with less than a quarter remaining as wildlands, supporting just 11% of terrestrial net primary production. Anthropogenic biomes offer a new way forward by acknowledging human influence on global ecosystems and moving us toward models and investigations of the terrestrial biosphere that integrate human and ecological systems.

DOI: 10.1890/070062

* ece@umbc.edu

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