in

Biodiversity needs both land sharing and land sparing

Ian Bateman and Andrew Balmford argue that land ‘sparing’ for conservation purposes is the best way to achieve conservation and food-security outcomes, by intensifying agricultural production on designated lands (Nature 618, 671–674; 2023). But to meet global biodiversity-conservation goals, land sparing needs to be combined with land sharing in a strategic and socially just way.

Competing Interests

The authors declare no competing interests.


Source: Ecology - nature.com

Q&A: Steven Gonzalez on Indigenous futurist science fiction

Corals have algal friends for dinner