Biodiversity Indicators in Your Pocket - BIYP
Updated 2009
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Biodiversity is the
variety of life on earth. It includes the diversity of individual
species, the genetic diversity within species and the range of
ecosystems that support them. The UK Government has committed to
two important international targets to protect biodiversity:
In 2001, European Union Heads of State or
Government agreed that biodiversity decline should be halted with
the aim of reaching this objective by 2010
In 2002, Heads of State at the United Nations
World Summit on Sustainable Development committed themselves to
achieve, by 2010, a significant reduction of the current rate of
biodiversity loss at the global, regional and national level, as a
contribution to poverty alleviation and to the benefit of all life
on Earth
A suite of biodiversity indicators for
the UK was first published in June 2007. The indicators show
changes in aspects of biodiversity such as the population size of
important species or the area of land managed for wildlife. They
provide part of the evidence to assess whether the targets set out
above have been achieved.
Eighteen UK biodiversity indicators are
presented, although one, habitat connectivity, is still under
development and presented with limited data. The indicators are
grouped under the six focal areas aligned to those used by the
Convention on Biological Diversity and in the European biodiversity
indicators:
Status and trends in components of
biodiversity
Sustainable use
Threats to biodiversity
Ecosystem integrity and ecosystem goods and
services
Status of resource transfers and use
Public awareness and participation
Whilst indicators are useful tools for
summarising broad trends and highlighting high-level messages, they
can never describe all the changes in the UK’s biodiversity. They
are best seen, as their name suggests, as indicative of the general
state of biodiversity. Whilst they will form the basis of the
UK’s assessment of progress towards the biodiversity targets, other
factors and sources of information are also being taken into
account.
Printed copies BIYP 2009 are available from
Defra publications by emailing
email address: biodiversity_[AT SYMBOL]_defra_DOT_gsi_DOT_gov_DOT_uk (replace _DOT_ with full stop/period and _[AT SYMBOL]_ with the usual @ symbol)
quoting reference
PB13261; alternatively you can download a copy below.
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Also available for download is the 2007 version
BIYP (PDF
2.7 mb) (as published 2007, without 2008 updates)
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