Human impacts on sub-Antarctic terrestrial environments

Sub-Antarctic islands are some of the rarest ecosystems on the planet and therefore are highly significant. Around 200 years of human activities have left a legacy of substantial impacts. We explore these under the collective headings of resource harvesting, local impacts and habitat loss, homogenis...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bergstrom, D. M., Selkirk, P. M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchers.mq.edu.au/en/publications/47e301c7-2102-4081-8798-26647dfbeccb
id ftmacquarieunicr:oai:https://researchers.mq.edu.au:publications/47e301c7-2102-4081-8798-26647dfbeccb
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spelling ftmacquarieunicr:oai:https://researchers.mq.edu.au:publications/47e301c7-2102-4081-8798-26647dfbeccb 2023-05-15T13:57:07+02:00 Human impacts on sub-Antarctic terrestrial environments Bergstrom, D. M. Selkirk, P. M. 2007 https://researchers.mq.edu.au/en/publications/47e301c7-2102-4081-8798-26647dfbeccb eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Bergstrom , D M & Selkirk , P M 2007 , ' Human impacts on sub-Antarctic terrestrial environments ' , Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania , vol. 141 , no. 1 , pp. 159-167 . sub-Antarctic islands human impacts homogenisation of biota climate change alien species contaminants /dk/atira/pure/mqoutputs/18 C1 - Refereed Journal Article article 2007 ftmacquarieunicr 2021-12-26T12:41:58Z Sub-Antarctic islands are some of the rarest ecosystems on the planet and therefore are highly significant. Around 200 years of human activities have left a legacy of substantial impacts. We explore these under the collective headings of resource harvesting, local impacts and habitat loss, homogenisation of biota and human-influenced climate change. Past human activities such as sealing and whaling have left seal species still in recovery phases, and infrastructure that continues to break down and pollute the local environment. Modern-day scientific stations have variously-sized footprints of buildings and tracks, and legacies of contaminants, particularly oils spills. On some islands, alien species have established and there is a range of impacts associated with such taxa ranging from transient to extensive, permanent transformation of ecosystems. Such impacts are being confounded by human-induced climate change. By projection, it is expected that both direct and indirect human impact will continue into the future. It is appropriate to plan all future human activity in ways that will minimise further burden on these ecosystems. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Macquarie University Research Portal Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection Macquarie University Research Portal
op_collection_id ftmacquarieunicr
language English
topic sub-Antarctic islands
human impacts
homogenisation of biota
climate change
alien species
contaminants
/dk/atira/pure/mqoutputs/18
C1 - Refereed Journal Article
spellingShingle sub-Antarctic islands
human impacts
homogenisation of biota
climate change
alien species
contaminants
/dk/atira/pure/mqoutputs/18
C1 - Refereed Journal Article
Bergstrom, D. M.
Selkirk, P. M.
Human impacts on sub-Antarctic terrestrial environments
topic_facet sub-Antarctic islands
human impacts
homogenisation of biota
climate change
alien species
contaminants
/dk/atira/pure/mqoutputs/18
C1 - Refereed Journal Article
description Sub-Antarctic islands are some of the rarest ecosystems on the planet and therefore are highly significant. Around 200 years of human activities have left a legacy of substantial impacts. We explore these under the collective headings of resource harvesting, local impacts and habitat loss, homogenisation of biota and human-influenced climate change. Past human activities such as sealing and whaling have left seal species still in recovery phases, and infrastructure that continues to break down and pollute the local environment. Modern-day scientific stations have variously-sized footprints of buildings and tracks, and legacies of contaminants, particularly oils spills. On some islands, alien species have established and there is a range of impacts associated with such taxa ranging from transient to extensive, permanent transformation of ecosystems. Such impacts are being confounded by human-induced climate change. By projection, it is expected that both direct and indirect human impact will continue into the future. It is appropriate to plan all future human activity in ways that will minimise further burden on these ecosystems.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Bergstrom, D. M.
Selkirk, P. M.
author_facet Bergstrom, D. M.
Selkirk, P. M.
author_sort Bergstrom, D. M.
title Human impacts on sub-Antarctic terrestrial environments
title_short Human impacts on sub-Antarctic terrestrial environments
title_full Human impacts on sub-Antarctic terrestrial environments
title_fullStr Human impacts on sub-Antarctic terrestrial environments
title_full_unstemmed Human impacts on sub-Antarctic terrestrial environments
title_sort human impacts on sub-antarctic terrestrial environments
publishDate 2007
url https://researchers.mq.edu.au/en/publications/47e301c7-2102-4081-8798-26647dfbeccb
geographic Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_source Bergstrom , D M & Selkirk , P M 2007 , ' Human impacts on sub-Antarctic terrestrial environments ' , Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania , vol. 141 , no. 1 , pp. 159-167 .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
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