When the International Year of Biodiversity was declared?

The United Nations (the U.N.) declared 2010 the International Year of Biodiversity. Throughout the year, several key initiatives were organized to spread awareness on the need to promote biodiversity conversation and encourage everyone – as individuals and groups – worldwide to take mindful steps to stop the loss of biodiversity. That year, the U.N.’s Convention on Biological Diversity held its 10th biannual meeting in Nagoya, Japan. This international legally binding treaty, which came into force in 1993, aims to encourage actions that will lead to a sustainable future.

Biodiversity — the variety of all life forms, from genes up — is vital because diversity makes for healthy, stable ecosystems. From coral reefs to the Kalahari, these natural ‘balancing acts’ are intrinsically valuable. But beyond beauty and amenity, ecosystems also provide essential ‘services’ such as breathable air, clean water and fertile soils. Fisheries, agriculture, medicine and many traditions and ways of life all depend on biodiverse ecosystems.

Clearly, biodiversity is key not just to life on Earth, but to economies and cultures. And for the poor, who often depend directly on land and sea for subsistence, it is literally a lifeline.

 

Picture Credit : Google