Skyglow extends into the world’s Key Biodiversity Areas
Garrett, J; Donald, PF; Gaston, KJ
Date: 10 February 2019
Journal
Animal Conservation
Publisher
Wiley / Zoological Society of London
Publisher DOI
Abstract
The proportion of the Earth’s surface that experiences a naturally dark environment at night is
rapidly declining with the introduction of artificial light. Biological impacts of this change have
been documented from genes to ecosystems, and for a wide diversity of environments and
organisms. The likely severity of these impacts ...
The proportion of the Earth’s surface that experiences a naturally dark environment at night is
rapidly declining with the introduction of artificial light. Biological impacts of this change have
been documented from genes to ecosystems, and for a wide diversity of environments and
organisms. The likely severity of these impacts depends heavily on the relationship between the
distribution of artificial nighttime lighting and biodiversity. Here, we carry out a global assessment
of the overlap between areas of conservation priority and the most recent atlas of artificial skyglow.
We show that of the world’s Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs), less than a third have completely
pristine nighttime skies, about a half lie entirely under artificially bright skies, and only about a fifth
contain no area in which nighttime skies are not polluted to the zenith. The extent of light pollution
of KBAs varies by region, affecting the greatest proportion of KBAs in Europe and the Middle
East. Statistical modelling revealed associations between light pollution within KBAs and
associated levels of both gross domestic product and human population density. This suggests that
these patterns will worsen with continued economic development and growth in the human
population
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