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新西兰非常见生态系统状况评估。

Status assessment of New Zealand's naturally uncommon ecosystems.

机构信息

Landcare Research PO Box 40, Lincoln 7640, New Zealand Landcare Research Private Bag 6, Nelson 7010, New Zealand.

出版信息

Conserv Biol. 2012 Aug;26(4):619-29. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2012.01868.x. Epub 2012 Jun 25.

Abstract

Globally, ecosystems are under increasing anthropogenic pressure; thus, many are at risk of elimination. This situation has led the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) to propose a quantitative approach to ecosystem-risk assessment. However, there is a need for their proposed criteria to be evaluated through practical examples spanning a diverse range of ecosystems and scales. We applied the IUCN's ecosystem red-list criteria, which are based on changes in extent of ecosystems and reductions in ecosystem processes, to New Zealand's 72 naturally uncommon ecosystems. We aimed to test the applicability of the proposed criteria to ecosystems that are naturally uncommon (i.e., those that would naturally occur over a small area in the absence of human activity) and to provide information on the probability of ecosystem elimination so that conservation priorities might be set. We also tested the hypothesis that naturally uncommon ecosystems classified as threatened on the basis of IUCN Red List criteria contain more threatened plant species than those classified as nonthreatened. We identified 18 critically endangered, 17 endangered, and 10 vulnerable ecosystems. We estimated that naturally uncommon ecosystems contained 145 (85%) of mainland New Zealand's taxonomically distinct nationally critical, nationally endangered, and nationally vulnerable plant species, 66 (46%) of which were endemic to naturally uncommon ecosystems. We estimated there was a greater number of threatened plant species (per unit area) in critically endangered ecosystems than in ecosystems classified as nonthreatened. With their high levels of endemism and rapid and relatively well-documented history of anthropogenic change, New Zealand's naturally uncommon ecosystems provide an excellent case-study for the ongoing development of international criteria for threatened ecosystems. We suggest that interactions and synergies among decline in area, decline in function, and the scale of application of the criteria be used to improve the IUCN criteria for threatened ecosystems.

摘要

全球范围内,生态系统承受着日益增加的人为压力;因此,许多生态系统面临灭绝的风险。这种情况导致国际自然保护联盟(IUCN)提出了一种生态系统风险评估的定量方法。然而,需要通过跨越多种生态系统和规模的实际案例来评估他们提出的标准。我们应用了 IUCN 的生态系统红色名录标准,这些标准基于生态系统范围的变化和生态系统过程的减少,来评估新西兰的 72 种自然不常见的生态系统。我们旨在测试所提出的标准对自然不常见的生态系统(即在没有人类活动的情况下自然发生在小面积上的生态系统)的适用性,并提供有关生态系统灭绝概率的信息,以便确定保护重点。我们还测试了一个假设,即根据 IUCN 红色名录标准被归类为受威胁的自然不常见生态系统,其包含的受威胁植物物种比被归类为非受威胁的生态系统多。我们确定了 18 个极危、17 个濒危和 10 个脆弱的生态系统。我们估计,自然不常见的生态系统包含了新西兰大陆 145 种(85%)分类上独特的、具有国家重要性的、濒危的和易危的植物物种,其中 66 种(46%)是自然不常见生态系统所特有的。我们估计,极危生态系统中的受威胁植物物种(单位面积)比非受威胁生态系统中的多。由于具有高特有性、快速且相对有据可查的人为变化历史,新西兰的自然不常见生态系统为正在制定的受威胁生态系统国际标准提供了极好的案例研究。我们建议,使用面积减少、功能减少和标准应用范围之间的相互作用和协同作用来改进 IUCN 受威胁生态系统的标准。

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