Centre for Population Biology, Imperial College London, Silwood Park, Buckhurst Road, Ascot, Berkshire SL5 7PY, UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2010 Nov 27;365(1558):3743-51. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2010.0264.
Continuing downward trends in the population sizes of many species, in the conservation status of threatened species, and in the quality, extent and connectedness of habitats are of increasing concern. Identifying the attributes of declining populations will help predict how biodiversity will be impacted and guide conservation actions. However, the drivers of biodiversity declines have changed over time and average trends in abundance or distributional change hide significant variation among species. While some populations are declining rapidly, the majority remain relatively stable and others are increasing. Here we dissect out some of the changing drivers of population and geographic range change, and identify biological and geographical correlates of winners and losers in two large datasets covering local population sizes of vertebrates since 1970 and the distributions of Galliform birds over the last two centuries. We find weak evidence for ecological and biological traits being predictors of local decline in range or abundance, but stronger evidence for the role of local anthropogenic threats and environmental change. An improved understanding of the dynamics of threat processes and how they may affect different species will help to guide better conservation planning in a continuously changing world.
物种数量持续减少、受威胁物种的保护状况、以及栖息地的质量、范围和连通性都令人越来越担忧。确定数量下降的特征将有助于预测生物多样性将如何受到影响,并指导保护行动。然而,生物多样性下降的驱动因素随着时间的推移而发生了变化,丰富度或分布变化的平均趋势掩盖了物种之间的显著差异。虽然一些种群正在迅速减少,但大多数种群相对稳定,还有一些种群在增加。在这里,我们剖析了一些人口和地理范围变化的变化驱动因素,并在两个大型数据集(自 1970 年以来涵盖脊椎动物的局部种群大小和过去两个世纪的 Galliform 鸟类分布)中确定了胜利者和失败者的生物和地理相关性。我们发现生态和生物特征作为局部范围或丰度下降的预测因子的证据较弱,但作为地方人为威胁和环境变化的预测因子的证据较强。更好地了解威胁过程的动态以及它们可能如何影响不同的物种,将有助于在不断变化的世界中指导更好的保护规划。