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Glossary definitions

The IPBES glossary terms definitions page provides definitions of terms used in IPBES assessments. Some definitions in this online glossary have been edited for consistency. Please refer to the specific assessment glossary for citations/authorities of definitions. 

We invite you to report any errors or omissions to [email protected].

Concept Definition Deliverable(s)
land abandonment

Land abandonment occurs when a particular land use ceases, and there is no clearly- defined subsequent land use practice. It is often associated with poorly defined ownership and/or land use governance.

Land degradation and restoration assessment
land cover

The physical coverage of land, usually expressed in terms of vegetation cover or lack of it. Related to, but not synonymous with, land use.

Sustainable use assessment
land cover

The observed (bio)physical cover on the earth's surface.

Global assessment (1st work programme), Land degradation and restoration assessment
land cover

The physical coverage of land, usually expressed in terms of vegetation cover or lack of it. Related to, but not synonymous with, land use (Millenium Ecosystem Assessment, 2005).

land cover

The surface cover on the ground, whether vegetation, urban infrastructure, water, bare soil or other. Identifying, delineating and mapping land cover is important for global monitoring studies, resource management, and planning activities. Identification of land cover establishes the baseline from which monitoring activities (change detection) can be performed, and provides the ground cover information for baseline thematic maps.

Asia-Pacific assessment
land degradation

Refers to the many processes that drive the decline or loss in biodiversity, ecosystem functions or their benefits to people and includes the degradation of all terrestrial ecosystems.

Americas assessment, Sustainable use assessment, Africa assessment, Global assessment (1st work programme)
land degradation neutrality

A state whereby the amount of healthy and productive land resources, necessary to support ecosystem services, remains stable or increases within specified temporal and spatial scales.

Land degradation and restoration assessment
land degradation

Refers to the many processes that drive the decline or loss in biodiversity, ecosystem functions or services and includes the degradation of all terrestrial ecosystems.

Asia-Pacific assessment, Land degradation and restoration assessment, Europe and Central Asia assessment, Global assessment (1st work programme)
land grabbing

See ‘Grabbing (of wild species and space)’.

Sustainable use assessment
land grabbing

See ‘Large scale land acquisition'.

land grabbing

The large-scale acquisition of land (especially in developing countries), driven primarily by concerns about food and energy security of high-income countries and often executed by the private sector.

Land degradation and restoration assessment
land sharing and sparing

Concepts used to describe, in general terms, spatial-temporal arrangements of agricultural and non-agricultural areas. Land sharing is a situation where farming practices enable biodiversity to be maintained within agricultural landscapes. Land sparing, also called land separation involves restoring or creating non-farmland habitat in agricultural landscapes at the expense of field-level agricultural production - for example, woodland, natural grassland, wetland, and meadow on arable land. This approach does not necessarily imply high-yield farming of the non-restored, remaining agricultural land. See also 'Conservation agriculture'.

Global assessment (1st work programme)
land sharing

A situation where low-yield farming enables biodiversity to be maintained within agricultural landscapes.

Land degradation and restoration assessment, Americas assessment, Europe and Central Asia assessment
land sparing

Also called Land separation involves restoring or creating non-farmland habitat in agricultural landscapes at the expense of field-level agricultural production - for example, woodland, natural grassland, wetland, and meadow on arable land. This approach does not necessarily imply high- yield farming of the non restored, remaining agricultural land. (From Rey Benayas & Bullock, 2012). See also Conservation agriculture in this Glossary.

Americas assessment
land sparing

Land sparing, also called land separation involves restoring or creating non-farmland habitat in agricultural landscapes at the expense of field-level agricultural production - for example, woodland, natural grassland, wetland, and meadow on arable land. This approach does not necessarily imply high-yield farming of the non-restored, remaining agricultural land. See also Conservation agriculture.

Europe and Central Asia assessment, Land degradation and restoration assessment
land tenure

The relationship, whether legally or customarily defined, among people, as individuals or groups, with respect to land.

Land degradation and restoration assessment
land transformation

A process whereby the biotic community of an area is substantially altered or substituted by another, along with the underlying ecological and human processes responsible for its persistence, often as a result of a deliberate decision to change the purpose for which the land is used.

Land degradation and restoration assessment
land use change

Land use refers to the modification or management of natural environments into human dominated environments, such as settlements, semi-natural and agricultural areas.

Asia-Pacific assessment
land use change

See Land use.

Americas assessment, Europe and Central Asia assessment
land use intensification

Activities undertaken with the intention of enhancing the productivity or profitability per unit area of rural land use, including intensification of particular land uses as well as changes between land uses (Martin et al., 2018).

Global assessment (1st work programme)
land use

The human use of a specific area for a certain purpose (such as residential, agriculture, recreation, industrial, etc.). Influenced by, but not synonymous with, land cover. Land-use change refers to a change in the use or management of land by humans, which may lead to a change in land cover.

Africa assessment, Pollination assessment, Global assessment (1st work programme), Land degradation and restoration assessment, Europe and Central Asia assessment, Sustainable use assessment, Asia-Pacific assessment, Americas assessment
land use

The human use of a specific area for a certain purpose (such as residential; agriculture; recreation; industrial, etc.). Influenced by, but not synonymous with, land cover. Land use change refers to a change in the use or management of land by humans, whi.

Global assessment (1st work programme)
landrace

A breed that has largely developed through adaptation to the natural environment and traditional production system in which it has been raised (FAO, 2013).

Global assessment (1st work programme)
landscape composition

The abundances of patch types represented within a landscape. Composition is not spatially explicit because it refers only to the variety and abundance of patch types, but not their placement or location (dispersion) in the landscape.

Pollination assessment
landscape configuration

The distribution, size and abundances of patch types represented within a landscape. Configuration is spatially explicit because it refers not only to the variety and abundance of patch types, but also to their placement or location (dispersion) in the landscape.

Europe and Central Asia assessment
landscape functioning

The capacity or potential of landscapes to provide services (Bolliger & Kienast, 2010).

Global assessment (1st work programme)
landscape heterogeneity

Landscape heterogeneity is a complex phenomenon involving the size, shape and composition of different landscape units and the spatial (and temporal) relations between them (G. Cale & J. Hobbs, 1994).

Global assessment (1st work programme)
landscape heterogeneity

Landscape heterogeneity is a complex phenomenon involving the size, shape and composition of different landscape units and the spatial (and temporal) relations between them.

Sustainable use assessment
landscape planning

An activity concerned with reconciling competing land uses while protecting natural processes and significant cultural and natural resources.

Pollination assessment
landscape socio-ecological approach

The landscape scale approach incorporates the socio-ecological system, including natural and human-modified ecosystems, influenced by ecological, historical, economic, and socio-cultural processes. The landscape includes an array of stakeholders small enough to be manageable, but large enough to deliver multiple functions for stakeholders with differing interests.

Land degradation and restoration assessment
landscape

A human-defined area ranging in size from c. 3 km2 to c. 3002 km. Landscape is spatially heterogeneous in at least one factor of interest and often consists of a mosaic of interacting ecosystems.

Land degradation and restoration assessment
landscape

An area delineated by an actor for a specific set of objectives, constitutes an area in which entities, including humans, interact according to rules (physical, biological, and social) that determine their relationships; Place-based systems that result from interactions between people, land, institutions (laws, rules and regulations) and values. Interactive aspects that define a landscape are functional interactions, negotiated spaces and multiple scales.

Global assessment (1st work programme), Asia-Pacific assessment
landscape

An area of land that contains a mosaic of ecosystems, including human-dominated ecosystems.

Americas assessment, Sustainable use assessment, Europe and Central Asia assessment
large scale land acquisition

The control (whether through ownership, lease, concession, contracts, quotas, or general power) of larger than locally-typical amounts of land by any persons or entities (public or private, foreign or domestic) via any means (‘legal’ or ‘illegal’) for purposes of speculation, extraction, resource control or commodification at the expense of agroecology, land stewardship, food sovereignty and human rights. It is sometimes also called land grabbing.

Global assessment (1st work programme)
large scale land acquisition

See ‘Grabbing (of wild species and space)’.

Sustainable use assessment
law of the sea

The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), in force since 1994, defines the rights and obligations of nations (167 at present) with regard to the use of the world's oceans and their resources, and the protection of the marine and coastal environment. The UNCLOS also defines national marine jurisdiction on maritime territories and provides guidelines related to the use and management of marine environment and resources.

Sustainable use assessment, Global assessment (1st work programme)
leaching

The dissolution and movement of dissolved substances by water.

Europe and Central Asia assessment
leaf area index

The total area of green leaves per unit area of ground covered (FAO, 2018a).

Global assessment (1st work programme)
leakage

An environmentally damaging activity that is relocated elsewhere after being stopped locally.

Americas assessment
leakage effect

Phenomena whereby the reduction in emissions (relative to a baseline) in a jurisdiction/sector associated with the implementation of mitigation policy is offset to some degree by an increase outside the jurisdiction/sector through induced changes in consumption, production, prices, land use and/or trade across the jurisdictions/sectors. Leakage can occur at a number of levels, be it a project, state, province, nation or world region.

Global assessment (1st work programme)
learning (traditional and formal)

Learning refers to the process of knowledge and skills acquisition. Studies on learning have payed attention to the different ways people acquire knowledge, practices, and beliefs (i.e. imitation, copying, trial-and-error), but also to the dynamics of kn.

Global assessment (1st work programme)
learning (traditional and formal)

Learning refers to the process of knowledge and skills acquisition. Studies on learning have payed attention to the different ways people acquire knowledge, practices, and beliefs (i.e. imitation, copying, trial-and-error), but also to the dynamics of knowledge transmission, or the different sources from which knowledge, practices, and beliefs are passed from one individual to another (i.e. from parents, peers, teachers, prestigious peoples, media, etc.). Social learning is defined as the acquisition of new information by copying others, and it is a key human strategy that allows for the accumulation of culturally transmitted knowledge.

Sustainable use assessment
legal and regulatory instrument

see “Policy instruments”.

Sustainable use assessment
legal pluralism

Legal pluralism is a sensitizing concept for situations in which people draw upon several legal systems, irrespective of their status within the state legal system.

Sustainable use assessment
level of resolution

Degree of detail captured in an analysis. A high level of resolution implies a highly detailed analysis, usually associated with finer spatial and temporal scales. A low level of resolution implies a less detailed analysis, usually associated with coarser spatial and temporal scales.

Asia-Pacific assessment
life frames of nature’s values

Frames that illustrate the in which people conceptualise how nature matters. Life frames mediate between ways of being/living and the prioritization of different sets of broad and specific values. The four archetypes of living from, living in, living with and living as nature are not mutually exclusive. They offer a range of sources-of-concern for nature that can overlap or be emphasized in diverse contexts (section 2.2.6).

Values assessment
limestone karsts

Referred to simply as karsts are sedimentary rock outcrops that consist primarily of calcium carbonate.

Asia-Pacific assessment
linguistic uncertainty

Imprecise meaning of words, including vagueness and ambiguity.

Scenarios and models assessment
livelihood diversification

Livelihood diversification is defined as the process by which rural families construct a diverse portfolio of activities and social support capabilities in their struggle for survival and in order to improve their standards of living”.

Sustainable use assessment
livelihood resilience

The capacity of all people across generations to sustain and improve their livelihood opportunities and well-being despite environmental, economic, social and political disturbances.

Land degradation and restoration assessment