Centre for Ecology and Conservation, University of Exeter, Penryn TR10 9EZ, UK.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2011 Jul 26;108(30):12337-42. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1017352108. Epub 2011 Jul 11.
Predicted effects of climate change include high extinction risk for many species, but confidence in these predictions is undermined by a perceived lack of empirical support. Many studies have now documented ecological responses to recent climate change, providing the opportunity to test whether the magnitude and nature of recent responses match predictions. Here, we perform a global and multitaxon metaanalysis to show that empirical evidence for the realized effects of climate change supports predictions of future extinction risk. We use International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List criteria as a common scale to estimate extinction risks from a wide range of climate impacts, ecological responses, and methods of analysis, and we compare predictions with observations. Mean extinction probability across studies making predictions of the future effects of climate change was 7% by 2100 compared with 15% based on observed responses. After taking account of possible bias in the type of climate change impact analyzed and the parts of the world and taxa studied, there was less discrepancy between the two approaches: predictions suggested a mean extinction probability of 10% across taxa and regions, whereas empirical evidence gave a mean probability of 14%. As well as mean overall extinction probability, observations also supported predictions in terms of variability in extinction risk and the relative risk associated with broad taxonomic groups and geographic regions. These results suggest that predictions are robust to methodological assumptions and provide strong empirical support for the assertion that anthropogenic climate change is now a major threat to global biodiversity.
气候变化的预测影响包括许多物种面临高灭绝风险,但由于人们认为缺乏经验证据,这些预测的可信度受到了损害。许多研究现在已经记录了生态系统对近期气候变化的响应,从而有机会检验近期响应的规模和性质是否与预测相符。在这里,我们进行了一次全球性的多分类群荟萃分析,以表明气候变化实际影响的经验证据支持未来灭绝风险的预测。我们使用国际自然保护联盟 (IUCN) 红色名录标准作为一个通用尺度,从广泛的气候影响、生态响应和分析方法中估计灭绝风险,并将预测与观测结果进行比较。在对气候变化未来影响进行预测的研究中,到 2100 年,灭绝概率的平均值为 7%,而根据观察到的响应,这一比例为 15%。在考虑到分析的气候变化影响类型以及研究的世界和分类群部分可能存在的偏差后,两种方法之间的差异较小:预测表明,跨分类群和区域的灭绝概率平均值为 10%,而经验证据给出的平均概率为 14%。除了总体灭绝概率的平均值外,观察结果还支持了预测在灭绝风险的可变性以及与广泛的分类群和地理区域相关的相对风险方面的观点。这些结果表明,预测具有稳健的方法学假设,并且为断言人为气候变化现在是全球生物多样性的主要威胁提供了强有力的经验支持。