“…Importantly, it is now clear that anthropogenic change is having intended and unintended impacts at every biological scale in a global niche construction and manipulation process (Jaureguiberry et al., 2022; Meneganzin et al., 2020). For biodiversity, the growth of unsustainable human consumption (Hughes, Tougeron, Martin, Menga, Rosado, Villasante, Madgulkar, Gonçalves, Geneletti, et al., 2023) has resulted in a ‘sustainability paradox’ (Chaudhary, 2022), with the development of a global human niche juxtaposed against the growing climate and ecological crises. The structure of human populations, with growing demands and unequal resource distribution (Adams, 2012; Hughes, Tougeron, Martin, Menga, Rosado, Villasante, Madgulkar, Gonçalves, Diele‐Viegas, et al., 2023; Hughes, Tougeron, Martin, Menga, Rosado, Villasante, Madgulkar, Gonçalves, Geneletti, et al., 2023), is increasingly converting natural ecosystems to an altered state, either functional and fit for human development or into dysfunctional and degraded conditions, and not a state for ecological diversity or function (Watson et al., 2016).…”