Science, 23 Apr 2026
Specially-adapted species living in glacier regions face rapid snowpack and ice loss, yet remain insufficiently protected by current international and regional policy frameworks. Within the European Union, the EU Habitats Directive is the only legislative tool that recognizes glaciers as a protected habitat, but it does not fully take into account glacier biodiversity or require systematic monitoring. This policy gap leaves glacial biodiversity largely overlooked. Glacial habitats support highly specialized and often endemic species, but lack concrete policy to enforce their protection. This emphasizes the need for stronger conservation frameworks and multidisciplinary panels to design regional management strategies. It also also points to emerging scientific evidence that some species can persist in areas with stable cold microclimates after a glacier disappears, suggesting that conservation planning should identify and protect these potential long-term biodiversity reservoirs.
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