GLOBIO 3.5 technical model description
This document contains a technical description of the GLOBIO model (version 3.5). It gives an overview of the input data, modelling steps and parameter values used to model human impacts on terrestrial biodiversity.
A global assessment model for terrestrial biodiversity
The GLOBIO model is designed to quantify past, present and future human-induced changes in terrestrial biodiversity at regional to global scales. The model is built on a set of cause-effect relationships that describe six anthropogenic impacts on biodiversity:
- land use
- climate change
- atmospheric nitrogen deposition
- infrastructure
- habitat fragmentation
- human encroachment
Mean species abundance
Biodiversity responses are quantified as the mean species abundance (MSA), which expresses the mean abundance of original species in disturbed conditions relative to their abundance in undisturbed habitat, as an indicator of the degree to which an ecosystem is intact. MSA values are quantified based on a synthesis (meta-analysis) of empirical species monitoring data in disturbed habitat compared to an undisturbed reference situation, reported in comparative studies derived from the literature.
Model application
The GLOBIO model is regularly used in biodiversity assessments, in particular the Global Biodiversity Outlooks (GBO) of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), the OECD Environmental Outlook, and UNEP’s Global Environmental Outlook.
Auteurs
Kenmerken
- Publicatietitel
- GLOBIO 3.5 technical model description
- Publicatiedatum
- 1 maart 2016
- Publicatie type
- Publication
- Publicatietaal
- Engels
- Productnummer
- 2369