Evidence and mapping of extinction debts for global forest-dwelling reptiles, amphibians and mammals

被引:0
|
作者
Youhua Chen
Shushi Peng
机构
[1] University of Alberta,Department of Renewable Resources
[2] Sino-French Institute for Earth System Science,undefined
[3] College of Urban and Environmental Sciences,undefined
[4] Peking University,undefined
来源
Scientific Reports | / 7卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Evidence of extinction debts for the global distributions of forest-dwelling reptiles, mammals and amphibians was tested and the debt magnitude was estimated and mapped. By using different correlation tests and variable importance analysis, the results showed that spatial richness patterns for the three forest-dwelling terrestrial vertebrate groups had significant and stronger correlations with past forest cover area and other variables in the 1500 s, implying the evidence for extinction debts. Moreover, it was likely that the extinction debts have been partially paid, given that their global richness patterns were also significantly correlated with contemporary forest variables in the 2000 s (but the absolute magnitudes of the correlation coefficients were usually smaller than those calculated for historical forest variables). By utilizing species-area relationships, spatial extinction-debt magnitudes for the three vertebrate groups at the global scale were estimated and the hotspots of extinction debts were identified. These high-debt hotspots were generally situated in areas that did not spatially overlap with hotspots of species richness or high extinction-risk areas based on IUCN threatened status to a large extent. This spatial mismatch pattern suggested that necessary conservation efforts should be directed toward high-debt areas that are still overlooked.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 20 条
  • [1] Evidence and mapping of extinction debts for global forest-dwelling reptiles, amphibians and mammals
    Chen, Youhua
    Peng, Shushi
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2017, 7
  • [2] Biological survey of a cloud forest in southwestern Mexico: plants, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals
    Carlos Almazan-Nunez, R.
    Alvarez-Alvarez, Edson A.
    Ruiz-Gutierrez, Fernando
    Almazan-Juarez, Angel
    Sierra-Morales, Pablo
    Toribio-Jimenez, Sarahi
    BIOTA NEOTROPICA, 2018, 18 (02):
  • [3] Environment-richness relationships for mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians at global and regional scales
    Qian, Hong
    ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2010, 25 (03) : 629 - 637
  • [4] CALIFORNIA GROUP VIRUS INFECTIONS IN SMALL, FOREST-DWELLING MAMMALS OF WISCONSIN - SOME ECOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS
    MOULTON, DW
    THOMPSON, WH
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE, 1971, 20 (03): : 474 - &
  • [5] Mycorrhizal effectiveness of Rhizopogon spores recovered from faecal pellets of small forest-dwelling mammals
    Colgan, W
    Claridge, AW
    MYCOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2002, 106 : 314 - 320
  • [6] A RAIN-FOREST SURVEY OF AMPHIBIANS, REPTILES AND SMALL MAMMALS AT MONTAGNE-DAMBRE, MADAGASCAR
    RAXWORTHY, CJ
    NUSSBAUM, RA
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 1994, 69 (01) : 65 - 73
  • [7] Preliminary surveys of the terrestrial vertebrate fauna (mammals, reptiles, and amphibians) of the Edumanon Forest Reserve, Nigeria
    Akani, Godfrey C.
    Aifesehi, Pedro E. E.
    Petrozzi, Fabio
    Amadi, Nioking
    Luiselli, Luca
    TROPICAL ZOOLOGY, 2014, 27 (03) : 63 - 72
  • [8] Living on the edge: Insights into habitat patterns of forest-dwelling mammals in the buffer zone of Melghat Tiger Reserve, India
    Chikkanarayanaswamy, Pavan
    Kulkarni, Jayant
    Pathak, Prasad
    JOURNAL FOR NATURE CONSERVATION, 2024, 80
  • [9] Habitat selection by forest-dwelling caribou in managed boreal forest of eastern Canada: Evidence of a landscape configuration effect
    Hins, Caroline
    Ouellet, Jean-Pierre
    Dussault, Claude
    St-Laurent, Martin-Hugues
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2009, 257 (02) : 636 - 643
  • [10] Biological survey of a cloud forest in southwestern Mexico: plants, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals (vol 18, 2018)
    Carlos Almazan-Nunez, R.
    Alvarez-Alvarez, Edson A.
    Ruiz-Gutierrez, Fernando
    Almazan-Juarez, Angel
    Sierra-Morales, Pablo
    Toribio-Jimenez, Sarahi
    BIOTA NEOTROPICA, 2018, 18 (03):