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This chapter addresses the treaty-making processes of some important biological diversity-related treaties whose existence can be traced back to the 1972 Stockholm Convention – in particular, treaties relating to access and benefit sharing from genetic materials related to biosafety. The chapter assesses the extent to which, in the negotiating processes relating to those treaties, the aspirations of developing countries have been adequately catered to. In particular, it suggests that, while in many instances the negotiations were commenced on the basis of the aspirations of developing countries, the final products often deferred these demands to future processes.
The 1972 Stockholm Conference marked the emergence of transnational environmental law, with states agreeing on commitments towards a healthy environment. While the 1972 Stockholm Declaration on the Human Environment may have been progressive and innovative at that time, it made no explicit mention of women, girls, or gender equality. Instead, women and girls were subsumed within the category of ‘man’. Through legal interpretation and analysis of policy documents, this chapter maps important progress made in the last 50 years. The article uncovers the untold story of women international lawmakers from the global South not only in advances on women’s rights but also in international law relevant to healthy social-ecological systems more broadly. The article finds that decoupling the notion of vulnerability from weakness and powerlessness and coupling it with agency and solidarity is needed if international law is going to tackle head on the biodiversity, climate change, pollution and water crises and effectively enable Earth stewardship.
Although only two of the 26 principles enshrined in the 1972 Stockholm Declaration are devoted specifically to the protection of nature, they have encouraged a large number of states to conclude various international agreements of a sectoral nature, which were supplemented in 1992 by a global agreement on biodiversity. In addition to tracing the influence of the Stockholm Declaration on international nature protection law, this chapter discusses the European Union’s (EU) role in the development of international law in this field. Conversely, the chapter also looks at how EU internal rules on nature protection have been influenced by the obligations stemming from multilateral environment agreements and illustrates the cross-fertilisation that has occurred between EU and international law.
This chapter explores the progressive development of international biodiversity law, from the 1972 Stockholm Conference on the Human Environment to 2022. It shows that some of the most forward-looking concepts enshrined in the 1972 Stockholm Declaration have guided the progressive development of international biodiversity law for 50 years, notably the need for cosmopolitan cooperation that takes into account distributive justice issues and human rights. Still, the sectoral and largely incremental approach of the Stockholm Declaration no longer fits in addressing the urgent triple planetary crises that we face. Rather, a transformative change is needed. International biodiversity law, in its interactions with human rights, can contribute to such a change, by focusing on environmental and social justice issues, by ensuring that solutions, including climate change response measures, have sustainable impacts at other scales and in other sectors, and by empowering those whose interests are not being met and represent transformative sustainability values.
Chapter 8 presents an evaluation of how the archaeology of the plateau can offer insights into environmental conservation and explores the political context of how data from the past are used by the modern Chinese state to solidify its control over the Tibetan people.
To assess the biodiversity richness of plant foods of the Italian Food Composition Database (IFCDB) at the species and below the species level and its evolution over time.
Design and Setting:
The biodiversity richness of plant foods in the IFCDB was assessed by counting the number of species and by identifying and categorising biodiverse plant foods, i.e. foods described below the species level (subspecies, variety and cultivar) as well as wild and neglected and underutilised species. This assessment was also performed with the FAO Biodiversity Indicator.
Participants:
This study analysed the current IFCDB that contains 900 records of food items, with 80 % of data derived from analytical determinations.
Results:
The 2019 IFCDB’s edition includes 114 plant species; among thirty two of them, one or more biodiverse foods were identified for a total of eighty-six records, corresponding to 21 % of the plant foods recorded. This marks a substantial increase from the 2000’s edition, which included 112 plant species and forty-eight biodiverse foods, corresponding to 16 % of the plant foods recorded.
Conclusions:
The IFCDB demonstrates progress in integrating plant food biodiversity, crucial for promoting sustainable diets and, consequently, sustainable food systems. Enhanced access to food composition data of biodiverse plant foods is required for the development and labelling of biodiverse processed plant foods and to increase the biodiversity richness of menus in community catering. This study may stimulate efforts in assessing and enhancing biodiversity richness of food composition tables in other countries.
Ecological restoration is increasingly recognized as essential for combating the biodiversity and climate crises. However, restoration activities can also produce or exacerbate social and environmental injustices. This article explores the extent to which the European Union’s 2024 Nature Restoration Regulation (NRR) enables ‘just ecological restoration’. Drawing on the three dimensions of environmental justice – distributive, recognitional, and procedural – we assess whether the NRR adequately includes justice considerations. Our analysis finds that while the Regulation includes several justice-relevant provisions, many are implicit and lack enforceable guarantees. Disparities in expected costs and benefits raise concerns over distribution, limited safeguards may exclude marginalized communities, and participation mechanisms vary across Member States. The potential of the NRR to foster fair and inclusive restoration depends largely on how Member States implement their national restoration plans and whether the European Commission provides clear guidance and support to ensure socially responsible action.
Roads are essential for social and economic development, but their presence often leads to deforestation, habitat loss, changes in wildlife behaviour and distribution, and loss through collisions with vehicles. In southern Bahia state in Brazil’s Atlantic Forest hotspot, cocoa agroforestry systems are vital in connecting natural fragments and supporting local biodiversity. This study assessed the impacts of a 24 km segment of the BA-262 road, a route linked to the construction of a new port. During May–December 2022, we recorded vertebrate roadkill events and analysed their relationship with traffic volume, identifying high-risk zones. Camera traps and live traps were deployed in forest fragments to evaluate mammal presence near and along the road, comparing species detected near the road with those recorded as roadkill. In total, we documented 243 roadkill events, with amphibians being the group most affected (153 individuals, 63% of the total recorded), followed by reptiles (49, 20%), birds (28, 12%) and mammals (13, 5%). Hotspot analyses revealed nine roadkill clusters. Camera traps along the road recorded 409 images of 21 mammal species from eight orders. Although species richness was unaffected by proximity to the road, relative abundance increased closer to the road. Mammals appeared less affected by the road than other groups, probably because they are mostly active at night, when traffic is lower. This research highlights the ecological impacts of roads on biodiversity-rich areas, underscoring the need for mitigation measures to reduce wildlife mortality and offering insights for future research.
Differences in testes arrangement and length of post-testicular region between Australian specimens of Paraschistorchis seychellesiensis sensu Magro, Cutmore, Carrasson & Cribb, 2023 and the original description of Paraschistorchis seychellesiensis (Toman, 1989) Blend, Karar & Dronen, 2017 from the Indian Ocean have raised a question whether such variations are intraspecific or interspecific variations. To address this, in-depth morphological descriptions and species delimitation analyses were conducted using a combination of comparative morphology, multivariate classification analyses, and host-parasite data. The Australian population of P. seychellesiensis differs from all known species of Paraschistorchis Blend, Karar & Dronen, 2017 by a broad linguiform body, a ventral sucker noticeably smaller than the oral sucker, a subquadrate pharynx that is partly dorsal to the oral sucker, and testes arrangement in a cluster configuration, as well as its distinct spatial clustering within all multivariate classification analyses without any intrusion into the space occupied by another cluster. Furthermore, the distinctive extension of the anterior vitellarium, significant differences in anterior testis/ovary ratios, and egg sizes indicate that Australian and Indian specimens of P. seychellesiensis are two distinct species. The apparent comparatively distant geographic localities, each with distinct ecosystems (Seychelles Islands vs Great Barrier Reef [GBR], Australia), are an interesting outcome of the recognition of separate species. Accordingly, Paraschistorchis australiensisn. sp. is established to accommodate this Australian record. Given the detailed review and newly added data provided herein, we discuss the nature of the excretory vesicle within schistorchiines and amend the key to the recognized species of Paraschistorchis.
Located in the central part of the Western Antarctic Peninsula, the Argentine Islands-Kyiv Peninsula region is a hotspot of moss diversity, with 51 species and one variety currently known. However, no studies have specifically addressed the distribution of rare mosses in this region. Applying the only definition of moss rarity currently available for Antarctica, we identify very rare (one to two unique occurrences) and rare (three to five unique occurrences) moss species in the region and present a biogeographical analysis of their spatial distribution with corresponding maps, based on a comprehensive synthesis of archival published occurrence data. Of the 51 recorded species, 23 were classified as locally very rare or rare. Cape Tuxen, Galindez Island, Darboux Island and Cape Pérez hosted the highest concentrations of rare moss diversity, with eight, seven, seven and six species, respectively. Five rare species were recorded at Petermann Island, four at Booth and Lahille islands and three each at Diorite, ‘Eight’ and Uruguay islands. Additionally, several locations hosted species with unique characteristics, including their only known occurrence in the Antarctic Peninsula or at their known range edge. Very rare and rare species assemblages showed only partial overlap among sites: the four most species-rich sites shared several taxa, but no species occurred at all sites. Uruguay, Diorite and ‘Eight’ islands together represented a full moss species pool of the four most species-rich sites. In addition, some sites supported distinct species not recorded elsewhere in the region. Notwithstanding the limitations of the available survey data, these findings highlight the regional significance of the Argentine Islands-Kyiv Peninsula region within the Western Antarctic Peninsula for moss diversity in terms of the recognized criteria required for developing proposals for formal protection under the Antarctic Treaty.
Protecting biodiversity on the planet through business involvement is a priority for many governments and citizens. To do this requires balancing different social, financial, and ecological objectives with economic output. This editorial questions what is the right way to do this based on considering different forms of capital, such as natural, human, social, manufactured, and financial. This enables renewed interest in the natural environment in terms of business involvement in issues such as climate change and the circular economy.
The Ngezi–Vumawimbi Forest Reserve is the largest remaining patch of natural vegetation on Pemba Island, Zanzibar, Tanzania. In 2024, in collaboration with the Department of Forestry, Ministry of Agriculture, Zanzibar, we conducted a baseline biodiversity survey of animal and plant communities. Preliminary results reveal previously unrecognized plant diversity, including species likely new to science that are currently under study. We confirmed the presence of endemic and threatened plant species, and recorded populations of species not previously reported on Pemba Island. We also confirmed the presence of a small population of blue duiker Philantomba monticola, currently under threat from poaching. One of the areas richest in plant diversity is designated for development of a new tourist resort. This would replace most of the Vumawimbi evergreen coastal forest, home to a unique forest type in continental Africa dominated by Intsia bijuga.
Armed conflicts in biodiversity hotspots across Africa significantly threaten conservation efforts. The incursion of armed groups since 2017 in the W–Arly–Pendjari Complex in Benin, Niger and Burkina Faso poses a severe threat to conservation efforts in one of West Africa’s largest transboundary natural World Heritage sites. Local conservation managers often have no clear strategies to address such threats. A better understanding of the key drivers of the armed conflict would help them to respond quickly and effectively using adaptive management approaches. We used the participative Delphi technique to identify the factors driving the conflict, the key players contributing to security threats in the region and the stakeholders who could contribute to solving the conservation issues linked to the security crisis. A panel of 20 experts identified the main drivers of the insecurity to be political, economic and social, especially the vulnerability and marginalization of local communities as a consequence of weak government control and limited resources. Violent extremist groups, particularly Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin, pose significant threats to conservation efforts in the region, which our results suggest would be best addressed through military action and regional cooperation to combat terrorism. We recommend that conservation managers adopt a community-focused strategy to reduce the vulnerability of forest-dependent communities and counter local alliances with Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin. Our findings contribute to a wider understanding of how the growing threat of violent extremist groups can negatively affect protected areas and what steps should be taken to counter this.
The rapid spread of non-native perennial grasses across South American savannas poses a growing threat to native plant diversity and ecosystem functioning. They disrupt key ecological processes, including fire regimes, nutrient cycling and plant community dynamics, driving the loss of functional diversity and the homogenization of native vegetation. This review compiles current knowledge on the ecological impacts of the nine most invasive perennial grass species in South American savannas and the challenges faced in controlling them, with a particular emphasis on the Brazilian Cerrado. We examine the mechanisms by which they outcompete native species, alter soil–plant interactions and inhibit natural regeneration. Particular attention is given to the ecological traits that confer competitive advantages to these invasive grasses under conditions of disturbance, increased nutrient availability and climate change. We also evaluate the challenges faced in the ecological restoration of invaded areas and discuss integrated strategies for controlling invasions and promoting the recovery of native species. This synthesis underscores the urgent need to address invasions by non-native grasses through coordinated research, new policies and management efforts aimed to safeguard the long-term biodiversity and ecological resilience of South American savannas.
This study aimed to examine the response of land snails to five land-use types (protected forest, unprotected forest, cocoa plantation, teak plantation, and fallow) in the Lamto Reserve and its surrounding rural area. Snails were sampled monthly and for one year, using a combination of direct search and litter sieving techniques on 20 plots (5 plots of 400m2/land-use type). A total of 5471 individuals belonging to 53 species and 10 families were sampled. Abundance peaked in the protected forest and was lowest in rural land-use types, while species richness was highest in forests and the cacao plantation and lowest in fallow. However, the Shannon index and species composition showed no significant variation, in contrast to evenness. Eighteen of the 53 recorded species were associated with land-use types, mostly in the protected forest. Snail abundance was mainly influenced by canopy cover, soil calcium, and sand content, with a marked seasonal effect peaking during the rainy season. Canopy cover and litter depth emerged as the main determinants of diversity indices. Land-use changes significantly impact snail communities, underscoring the need for balanced conservation land management in tropical ecosystems.
Despite the neoliberal wave solidarity capitalism has remained important in Europe. Since it was impossible to tame capitalism globally, promoters of solidarity turned to the European Union, and strove to strengthen its ‘flanking’ welfare state. The early 1990s brought a first peak of international awareness regarding environmental protection and interest in social Europe, but that was shattered by a neoliberal reaction from the mid-1990s to the mid-2010s. Since then, social and environmental policies have been on the rise again, only to be challenged by the Russo-Ukrainian War. Three expressions of solidarity will be examined. The first deals with the legal regulation of globalisation through social legislation and trade regulation. The second involves financial redistribution towards the neediest, with transfers to poor regions (cohesion policy), and later with specific measures during the Covid-19 crisis (2020–21). The third addresses the rising importance of environmental regulation in general (air and water pollution, biodiversity, etc.), especially with regard to climate change (Kyoto Protocol, 2015 Paris Agreement), despite the lobbying of the ‘Merchants of Doubts’.
Our collective futures depend on ecological stewardship rooted in both understanding of and care for the complex relationships of forest ecosystems. In particular, nuanced insight into forests’ entwined link with climate change is integral to policies and practices that can mitigate the worst climate impacts and sustain resilient multispecies communities. To this end, we foreground a creative approach to critical data literacies in the context of the biodiversity and climate crises. As part of the project Forest Carbon Futures, we present three explorations into different creative avenues for representing data, which share common aims of exploring the value of storytelling and situatedness in supporting more palpable connections between people, forests, stewardship responsibility, collective agency and more resilient futures. We position this inquiry as a valuable facet within an emerging field of Critical Forest Studies that holds promise in fostering ecologically-attuned understanding and care in relation to forest landscapes. Through interdisciplinary co-inquiry grounded in design and creation methodologies, we offer a constellation of interlinked themes, strategies and insights to inform transformative approaches to environmental education in our current era of ecological disconnect and rampant mis/disinformation.
This chapter details the vital role of Indigenous trade and investment in promoting sustainable development. Firstly, it discusses the prerequisite for Indigenous trade, emphasizing a nation-building approach centred on the significance of robust tribal infrastructure. The chapter then addresses the barriers hindering Indigenous inter-tribal trade, including state, or provincial interference in tribal jurisdiction, poor tribal governance, Canada’s failure to honour its Jay Treaty obligations, the lack of Indigenous foreign trade zones, the exclusion of Indigenous traditional knowledge (TK) from intellectual property (IP) regimes, and historical challenges in trade financing. Additionally, the chapter explores Indigenous trade and commerce engagements with non-Indigenous enterprises, both with and without federal permission, highlighting the implications, challenges, and opportunities involved. By examining these aspects, the chapter advocates for empowering Indigenous nations through trade and investment, fostering economic opportunities while preserving cultural heritage, and working towards sustainable development by creating a strong economic baseline.
This chapter presents a case study of Canada, examining the intricate relationship between Indigenous peoples and the developments related to British, then Canadian, governance. It begins by exploring the historical and legal context within which Indigenous peoples exist in Canada, tracing the impact of colonization and the recognition of Indigenous rights. The chapter then investigates the potential for affirming these rights through treaties and trade agreements, highlighting the role of treaties in recognizing and protecting Indigenous rights and the opportunities and challenges presented by trade agreements for Indigenous economic development and self-determination. It further analyses the Canadian government’s efforts to domestically enforce the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) and the intersection of Canadian treaties with trade agreements. This chapter emphasizes the importance of ongoing dialogue, collaboration, and the implementation of measures aligned with UNDRIP principles to foster the recognition, empowerment, and well-being of Indigenous peoples within the Canadian context.
This introduction presents the volume’s premise and structure. It details why it is crucial to examine and harmonize the two worlds of law and knowledge to understand and amplify Indigenous guidance and wisdom found in treaty commitments. This introduction introduces the volume’s five parts, each discussing different aspects of understanding and implementing the various international, multinational, and nation-to-nation treaties to advance sustainable development and affirm Indigenous knowledge and rights in the various legal systems that we will explore.