What is the evidence on indirect drivers of biodiversity loss worldwide? A systematic map protocol
Federico Grossi, Daniel I. Avila-Ortega, Anne-Sophie Crépin, Elina A. Virtanen, Enrico Di Minin

TL;DR
This paper outlines a systematic review protocol to map indirect drivers of global biodiversity loss and their links to direct drivers.
Contribution
The study introduces a systematic map protocol to identify and categorize evidence on indirect drivers of biodiversity loss.
Findings
A systematic map will categorize evidence on indirect drivers of biodiversity loss worldwide.
The map will identify links between indirect and direct drivers and their effects on biodiversity.
The database will be publicly accessible as an interactive online resource.
Abstract
An estimated 1 million species of animals and plants are threatened with extinction. While much research has concentrated on direct drivers (e.g., land use change) of biodiversity loss, understanding the indirect (e.g., economic, demographic, and institutional, etc.) drivers triggering these direct drivers is a research priority. Systematic reviews of literature mapping the links between indirect and direct drivers and where, when, how, and what biodiversity they affect are missing. The primary research question of this systematic map will be: What is the evidence on indirect drivers of biodiversity loss worldwide? Eligible studies must include information on the links between direct and indirect drivers and how they affect biodiversity. Outcomes will be categorized by species, taxonomic groups, ecological levels of organization, geographical scope, and both direct and indirect drivers…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsLand Use and Ecosystem Services · Conservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management · Environmental Conservation and Management
