Anthropogenic modification of forests means only 40% of remaining forests have high ecosystem integrity

@article{Grantham2020AnthropogenicMO,
  title={Anthropogenic modification of forests means only 40\% of remaining forests have high ecosystem integrity},
  author={Hedley S. Grantham and Adam Duncan and Tom D. Evans and Kendall R. Jones and Hawthorne L. Beyer and Richard Schuster and Joseph Walston and Justina C. Ray and John G. Robinson and Martin Callow and Tom Clements and Hugo M. Costa and A. DeGemmis and Paul R. Elsen and Jamison Ervin and P. Franco and Elizabeth Dow Goldman and Scott J. Goetz and Andrew J. Hansen and E. Hofsvang and Patrick A. Jantz and S. Jupiter and Aili Kang and Penny F. Langhammer and William F. Laurance and Susan Lieberman and Matthew Linkie and Yadvinder S. Malhi and Sean L. Maxwell and Martin Mendez and Russell A. Mittermeier and Nicholas J. Murray and Hugh P. Possingham and Hugh P. Possingham and Jeremy Radachowsky and Sassan S. Saatchi and Cristi{\'a}n Samper and Jeffrey Silverman and Aur{\'e}lie Shapiro and Bernardo B. N. Strassburg and Ted Stevens and Emma J. Stokes and R. Taylor and Timothy Tear and Robert Tizard and Oscar Venter and Piero Visconti and Stephanie Wang and James E. M. Watson and James E. M. Watson},
  journal={Nature Communications},
  year={2020},
  volume={11},
  url={https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:228082162}
}
A globally consistent, continuous index of forest condition as determined by the degree of anthropogenic modification is generated by integrating data on observed and inferred human pressures and an index of lost connectivity.
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