Published July 1, 2019 | Version 1
Dataset Open

Global restoration opportunities in tropical rainforest landscapes - Supplementary Materials - Spatial Data Layers

  • 1. University of Sao Paulo
  • 2. Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre
  • 3. University of Florida
  • 4. Pontifícia Universidade Católica
  • 5. Universidad Nacional de Misiones
  • 6. The Woods Hole Research Center
  • 7. Missouri Botanical Garden
  • 8. Northern Arizona University
  • 9. University of Connecticut

Contributors

Contact person:

  • 1. Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre

Description

Global restoration opportunities in tropical rainforest landscapes

Sci Adv 5 (7), eaav3223

DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aav3223

https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/5/7/eaav3223

Supplementary Materials

https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/suppl/2019/07/01/5.7.eaav3223.DC1

Spatial Data layers:

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3233495

_OutR10:

r_10.img → Global restoration opportunity score (ROS)

r_10_sc.img → Global restoration opportunity score (ROS) – rescaled 0-1

r_10_nt_sc.img → Neo Tropic restoration opportunity score (ROS) – rescaled 0-1

r_10_aa_sc.img → Australiasia restoration opportunity score (ROS) – rescaled 0-1

r_10_at_sc.img → Afro Tropic restoration opportunity score (ROS) – rescaled 0-1

r_10_im_sc.img → Indo Malay restoration opportunity score (ROS) – rescaled 0-1

r_10_nt_sc.img → Neo Tropic restoration opportunity score (ROS) – rescaled 0-1

 

_OutBasics:

r_1.img → Study Area

r_2.img → Restorable Area

r_3.img → Restoration Benefits

r_4.img → Restoration feasibility


_OutCountry:

r_10_XXX_sc.tif → restoration opportunity score (ROS) for country XXX – rescaled 0-1


_OutHotspots:

r_10_hotspot_XXX_hotspot_area_sc.tif → restoration opportunity score (ROS) for conservation hotspot area XXX – rescaled 0-1

r_10_hotspots_upper60.img → Areas with restoration opportunity score (ROS) above 0.6 in conservation hotspots


_OutKBA:

r_10_XXX_sc.tif → restoration opportunity score (ROS) for Key Biodiversity Area XXX – rescaled 0-1

r_10_kba_upper60.img → Areas with restoration opportunity score (ROS) above 0.6 in Key Biodiversity Areas


_OutAichi:

r_10_aichi_XXX.tif → Top 15% area of with highest restoration opportunity score (ROS) in country XXX

r_10_aichi.img → Top 15% area of with highest restoration opportunity score (ROS) global


_OutBonn:

r_10_XXX_Bonn.img → Area with highest restoration opportunity score (ROS) in country XXX according to their Bonn Challenge commitments

 

_OutParis:

r_10_at_paris.img → Area with highest restoration opportunity score (ROS) in Afro Tropic Nationally Determined Contributions to the Paris Climate Agreement

r_10_im_paris.img → Area with highest restoration opportunity score (ROS) in Indo Malay Nationally Determined Contributions to the Paris Climate Agreement

r_10_nt_paris.img → Area with highest restoration opportunity score (ROS) in Neo Tropic Nationally Determined Contributions to the Paris Climate Agreement


_OutTEOW:

r_10_ECOREGION_XXX_sc.tif → restoration opportunity score (ROS) for Ecoregion XXX – rescaled 0-1

r_10_ECOREGION_upper60.img → Areas with restoration opportunity score (ROS) above 0.6 in Ecoregions

 

_OutAll

alltargets.img → Area with highest restoration opportunity score (ROS) according to all targets (excluded from the paper)

 

Notes

This is the Supplementary Materials of the Brancalion et al. 2019 (Global restoration opportunities in tropical rainforest landscapes, Science Advances, https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/5/7/eaav3223) Authors: Pedro H. S. Brancalion, Aidin Niamir, Eben Broadbent, Renato Crouzeilles, Felipe S. M. Barros, Angelica M. Almeyda Zambrano, Alessandro Baccini , James Aronson, Scott Goetz, J. Leighton Reid, Bernardo B. N. Strassburg, Sarah Wilson, Robin L. Chazdon Correspondence to: pedrob@usp.br | niamir@gmail.com  Abstract: Over 140 Mha of large-scale restoration commitments have been pledged across the global tropics, yet guidance is needed to identify those landscapes where implementation is likely to provide the greatest potential benefits and cost-effective outcomes. We identify restoration opportunities in lowland tropical rainforest landscapes by overlaying seven recent, peer-reviewed spatial datasets as proxies for the socio-environmental benefits and feasibility of restoration. Restoration opportunities, areas with higher potential return of benefits and feasibility, were found throughout the tropics. The area with top 10% of the restoration opportunity score (i.e. restoration hotspots) covers 88% and 73%, respectively, of the global biodiversity hotspots for conservation priorities and countries committed to the Bonn Challenge, a global effort to restore 350 Mha by 2030. However, a small proportion of the total extent of the Key Biodiversity Area network (19.1%) were restoration hotspots. Concentrating restoration investments in landscapes with high benefits and feasibility would maximize the potential to mitigate anthropogenic impacts and improve human wellbeing.

Files

_OutAichi.zip

Files (450.7 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:f8e7aaf3076234fad7ccb27482d179e9
14.5 MB Preview Download
md5:63bb3de4c5e5cf06a8ce5f135c3d5ced
5.3 MB Preview Download
md5:dbb07ac1cbae35977daede457ca1319d
75.9 MB Preview Download
md5:5824f718cf530232db2249ebeaf82d77
122.2 MB Preview Download
md5:e48febd1ecafc534246d85e610991f18
46.1 MB Preview Download
md5:4f5313b48b02a480389c3b853e77dee5
30.3 MB Preview Download
md5:62218ff61fbf0a2a0f96023fc666b9cb
10.2 MB Preview Download
md5:04b912c7db9585a45d4ec3958c60d7de
1.7 MB Preview Download
md5:7cc57a7a38b71bb39b1d4fbdaa3d72d9
124.5 MB Preview Download
md5:9a2896479fe0c7f95a80afa33e0ade43
19.9 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is supplement to
10.1126/sciadv.aav3223 (DOI)

References

  • Brancalion et al., Sci. Adv. 2019; 5 : eaav3223