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Multiple ecological pathways to extinction in mammals.


ABSTRACT: As human population and resource demands continue to grow, biodiversity conservation has never been more critical. About one-quarter of all mammals are in danger of extinction, and more than half of all mammal populations are in decline. A major priority for conservation science is to understand the ecological traits that predict extinction risk and the interactions among those predictors that make certain species more vulnerable than others. Here, using a new database of nearly 4,500 mammal species, we use decision-tree models to quantify the multiple interacting factors associated with extinction risk. We show that the correlates of extinction risk vary widely across mammals and that there are unique pathways to extinction for species with different lifestyles and combinations of traits. We find that risk is relative and that all kinds of mammals, across all body sizes, can be at risk depending on their specific ecologies. Our results increase the understanding of extinction processes, generate simple rules of thumb that identify species at greatest risk, and highlight the potential of decision-tree analyses to inform conservation efforts.

SUBMITTER: Davidson AD 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2705575 | biostudies-literature | 2009 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Multiple ecological pathways to extinction in mammals.

Davidson Ana D AD   Hamilton Marcus J MJ   Boyer Alison G AG   Brown James H JH   Ceballos Gerardo G  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20090615 26


As human population and resource demands continue to grow, biodiversity conservation has never been more critical. About one-quarter of all mammals are in danger of extinction, and more than half of all mammal populations are in decline. A major priority for conservation science is to understand the ecological traits that predict extinction risk and the interactions among those predictors that make certain species more vulnerable than others. Here, using a new database of nearly 4,500 mammal spe  ...[more]

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