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Main Authors: Rosenberg, Yuval, Wiedenhofer, Dominik, Virág, Doris, Bar-Sella, Gabriel, Greenspoon, Lior, Herrnstadt, Barr, Akenji, Lewis, Phillips, Rob, Milo, Ron
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Nature ecology & evolution 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41145680/
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author Rosenberg, Yuval
Wiedenhofer, Dominik
Virág, Doris
Bar-Sella, Gabriel
Greenspoon, Lior
Herrnstadt, Barr
Akenji, Lewis
Phillips, Rob
Milo, Ron
author_facet Rosenberg, Yuval
Wiedenhofer, Dominik
Virág, Doris
Bar-Sella, Gabriel
Greenspoon, Lior
Herrnstadt, Barr
Akenji, Lewis
Phillips, Rob
Milo, Ron
Rosenberg, Yuval
Wiedenhofer, Dominik
Virág, Doris
Bar-Sella, Gabriel
Greenspoon, Lior
Herrnstadt, Barr
Akenji, Lewis
Phillips, Rob
Milo, Ron
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Human biomass movement exceeds the biomass movement of all land animals combined. Rosenberg, Yuval Wiedenhofer, Dominik Virág, Doris Bar-Sella, Gabriel Greenspoon, Lior Herrnstadt, Barr Akenji, Lewis Phillips, Rob Milo, Ron Animals Biomass Humans Birds Mammals Human Activities Arthropods Earth is teeming with life on the move, shaping ecosystems and human civilizations alike. However, the magnitude of movement by humans and other animals has yet to be assessed holistically. Here we quantify the movement of biomass across all animal life and in comparison to humanity. We show that the combined biomass movement of all wild birds, land arthropods and wild land mammals is about one-sixth that of humans walking and about 40 times smaller than all the biomass movement of humans. The biomass movement of marine animals, which we find to be the living world's largest, has been halved since 1850 due to industrial fishing and whaling, while human biomass movement has increased by about 40-fold. This study gives a quantitative perspective on global mobility in the Anthropocene and sharpens our perception regarding the extent of human versus animal activity.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_41145680
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2025
publisher Nature ecology & evolution
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Human biomass movement exceeds the biomass movement of all land animals combined.
Rosenberg, Yuval
Wiedenhofer, Dominik
Virág, Doris
Bar-Sella, Gabriel
Greenspoon, Lior
Herrnstadt, Barr
Akenji, Lewis
Phillips, Rob
Milo, Ron
Animals
Biomass
Humans
Birds
Mammals
Human Activities
Arthropods
Human biomass movement exceeds the biomass movement of all land animals combined. Rosenberg, Yuval Wiedenhofer, Dominik Virág, Doris Bar-Sella, Gabriel Greenspoon, Lior Herrnstadt, Barr Akenji, Lewis Phillips, Rob Milo, Ron Animals Biomass Humans Birds Mammals Human Activities Arthropods Earth is teeming with life on the move, shaping ecosystems and human civilizations alike. However, the magnitude of movement by humans and other animals has yet to be assessed holistically. Here we quantify the movement of biomass across all animal life and in comparison to humanity. We show that the combined biomass movement of all wild birds, land arthropods and wild land mammals is about one-sixth that of humans walking and about 40 times smaller than all the biomass movement of humans. The biomass movement of marine animals, which we find to be the living world's largest, has been halved since 1850 due to industrial fishing and whaling, while human biomass movement has increased by about 40-fold. This study gives a quantitative perspective on global mobility in the Anthropocene and sharpens our perception regarding the extent of human versus animal activity.
title Human biomass movement exceeds the biomass movement of all land animals combined.
topic Animals
Biomass
Humans
Birds
Mammals
Human Activities
Arthropods
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41145680/