Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Amazon Biocultural Heritage Decline
The Core Concept: Anthropogenic climate change and the extinction of Indigenous languages are projected to eliminate up to one-third of the native plant species utilized by Amazonian cultures, causing a massive decline in regional biocultural knowledge by 2080.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: While standard ecological forecasts evaluate species extinction in isolation, this model quantifies the compounding effects of climate-driven range contraction and language loss, revealing that the geographic ranges of human-utilized plants will shrink more severely than those of non-utilized flora.
Origin/History: Detailed in a July 8, 2026, Nature publication led by researchers at the University of Zurich, the underlying database synthesized 700 historical references spanning over 500 years of documented Amazonian plant use.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Compilation of a comprehensive ethnobotanical database detailing the utilization of 5,796 plant species across nine Amazonian countries and territories.
- Integration of 8,429 species distribution models to project future geographic plant ranges.
- Application of three distinct Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) climate scenarios to simulate habitat shifts between 2060 and 2080.
- Calculation of biocultural heritage decline by linking the ecological extinction of plant species with the linguistic extinction of the Indigenous names and oral traditions associated with them.
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