This dataset portrays the anthropogenic biomes ("anthromes")
of the world in 5-arc-minute gridded format for the year 1800. This is
from version 2.0, which is a time series containing four datasets from 1700-2000.
{From Ellis et al., 2010}
Anthropogenic biomes (anthromes) were mapped for 1700, 1800, 1900 and
2000 using a rule-based anthrome classification model applied to gridded
global data for human population density and land use. Anthropogenic
transformation of terrestrial biomes was then characterized by map
comparisons at century intervals.
In 1700, nearly half of the terrestrial biosphere was wild, without
human settlements or substantial land use. Most of the remainder was in
a seminatural state (45%) having only minor use for agriculture and
settlements. By 2000, the opposite was true, with the majority of the
biosphere in agricultural and settled anthromes, less than 20%
seminatural and only a quarter left wild. Anthropogenic transformation
of the biosphere during the Industrial Revolution resulted about equally
from land-use expansion into wildlands and intensification of land use
within seminatural anthromes. Transformation pathways differed strongly
between biomes and regions, with some remaining mostly wild but with the
majority almost completely transformed into rangelands, croplands and
villages. In the process of transforming almost 39% of earth's total
ice-free surface into agricultural land and settlements, an additional
37% of global land without such use has become embedded within
agricultural and settled anthromes.
Further information and data download available at: http://ecotope.org/anthromes/v2/data/