FEATURES OF BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION IN EASTERN PODILLIA: THEORETICAL AND PRACTICAL APPROACHES
Abstract
Biotic diversity (BD) is the basis for the formation of a holistic,
structured, unique, self-regulating and self-renewing biotic system that
performs key planetary functions. In essence, it is the history of the endless
development of diversity of forms at different levels of its organisation
(genetic, population-species, coenotic, ecosystem) and life functions as a
single, holistic, unique planetary phenomenon. The unity and continuity of
forms and functions necessitate the preservation of BD. However, the entire
process of human development has been aimed at disrupting this integrity,
as it has taken place at its expense. This has been particularly evident in the
current stage of the technological revolution, when the rate of anthropogenic
changes in vegetation cover, ecosystems and landscapes has exceeded the
rate of natural evolution, and a number of negative actions (the greenhouse
effect, desertification, ozone holes, acid rain, smog, pollution with toxic
compounds, anthropogenic transformation of natural landscapes, military
conflicts) have taken on global significance. It has become clear that the
catastrophic loss of biodiversity, which is the most important component of
the biosphere, the sociosphere, the "ecosystem fund" and "natural capital",
is the greatest threat to society. The reduction in biodiversity is a
consequence of the increase in areas dominated by humans (urbicultural and
agroecosystems), the decline in the productivity of natural ecosystems, the
disruption of small-scale nutrient cycles, the breakdown of food chains and
links between organisms, and the deterioration of the socio-economic living
conditions of the population

