
The Human Industrial Footprint (HIF) map showing the varying levels of ecosystem disturbance.
Image Credit: University of Queensland
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Ecosystem Disturbance and Human Industrial Footprint Mapping
The Core Concept: Researchers have developed two high-resolution national datasets—the Human Industrial Footprint (HIF) and the Ecological Intactness Index (EII)—to precisely map the extent and intensity of human-driven ecosystem disturbance across the Australian continent.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike 30-year-old national models or generic global maps that omit region-specific operations, this spatial analysis achieves a 100-meter resolution that isolates and overlaps 16 distinct human pressures. This methodology allows for a highly accurate quantification of cumulative habitat loss, environmental strain, and landscape fragmentation.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Human Industrial Footprint (HIF): A spatial model consolidating 16 specific environmental pressures—including mining, agriculture, public infrastructure, forestry plantations, roads, and human settlements—into a single metric of ecosystem disruption.
- Ecological Intactness Index (EII): A complementary dataset that evaluates and quantifies the resulting degree of habitat loss, baseline ecosystem quality, and physical fragmentation across the continent.
- Cumulative Strain Modeling: Utilizes a 100-meter resolution grid to calculate the compounding biological strain on environments where multiple distinct pressures (e.g., agricultural grazing intersecting with transportation infrastructure) overlap.




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