Abstract

Roughly 43 percent of Earth's terrestrial vegetated surface has diminished capacity to supply benefits to humanity because of recent, direct impacts of land use. This represents an ∼10 percent reduction in potential direct instrumental value (PDIV), defined as the potential to yield direct benefits such as agricultural, forestry, industrial, and medicinal products. If present trends continue, the global loss of PDIV could reach ∼20 percent by 2020. From a biophysical perspective, recovery of ∼5 percent of PDIV is feasible over the next 25 years. Capitalizing on natural recovery mechanisms is urgently needed to prevent further irreversible degradation and to retain the multiple values of productive land.

Keywords

Natural resource economicsAgricultureEnvironmental scienceLand degradationYield (engineering)AgroforestryValue (mathematics)Degradation (telecommunications)Agricultural economicsAgricultural engineeringEconomicsEcologyMathematicsEngineeringBiologyStatistics

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Publication Info

Year
1995
Type
article
Volume
269
Issue
5222
Pages
350-354
Citations
230
Access
Closed

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Gretchen C. Daily (1995). Restoring Value to the World's Degraded Lands. Science , 269 (5222) , 350-354. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.269.5222.350

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DOI
10.1126/science.269.5222.350