Shifting baselines clarify the impact of contemporary logging on forest-dependent threatened species
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Ward, Michelle
Ashman, Kita
Lindenmayer, David B.
Legge, Sarah
Kindler, Gareth
Cadman, Timothy
Fletcher, Rachel
Whiterod, Nick
Lintermans, Mark
Zylstra, Philip
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Despite the importance of protecting forests and woodlands to achieve global climate and biodiversity goals, logging impacts persist worldwide. Forestry advocates often downplay these impacts but rarely consider the cumulative threat deforestation and degradation has had, and continues to have, on biodiversity. Using New South Wales (Australia) as a case study, we quantify the extent of deforestation and degradation from 1788 (pre-European colonization) to 2021. We used historical loss as a baseline to evaluate recent logging (2000–2022) and the condition of the remaining native forest and woodland. Condition was quantified by measuring the similarity of a current ecosystem to a historical reference state with high ecological integrity. Using these data, we measured the impacts on 269 threatened terrestrial species. We show that possibly over half (29 million ha) of pre-1788 native forest and woodland vegetation in NSW has been lost. Of the remaining 25 million ha, 9 million ha is estimated to be degraded. We found recent logging potentially impacted 150 species that had already been affected by this historical deforestation and degradation, but the impacts varied across species. Forty-three species that were identified as impacted by historical deforestation and degradation and continue to be impacted by logging, now have ≤50% of their pre-1788 extent remaining that is intact and nine species now have ≤30%. Our research contextualizes the impact of current logging against historical deforestation and highlights deficiencies in environmental assessments that ignore historical baselines. Future land management must consider both the extent and condition of remaining habitat based on pre-1788 extents.
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Conservation Science and Practice
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