Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia e Evolução, Universidade Federal de Goiás, Goiânia, Goiás, Brazil.
PLoS One. 2013 Sep 9;8(9):e73431. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0073431. eCollection 2013.
Red Lists of threatened species play a critical role in conservation science and practice. However, policy-making based on Red Lists ignores ecological and evolutionary consequences of losing biodiversity because these lists focus on species alone. To decide if relying on Red Lists alone can help to conserve communities' functional (FD) and phylogenetic (PD) diversity, it is useful to evaluate whether Red List categories represent species with diverse ecological traits and evolutionary histories. Additionally, local scale analyses using regional Red Lists should represent more realistic pools of co-occurring species and thereby better capture eventual losses of FD and PD. Here, we used 21 life-history traits and a phylogeny for all Brazilian birds to determine whether species assigned under the IUCN global Red List, the Brazilian national, and regional Red Lists capture more FD and PD than expected by chance. We also built local Red Lists and analysed if they capture more FD and PD at the local scale. Further, we investigated whether individual threat categories have species with greater FD and PD than expected by chance. At any given scale, threat categories did not capture greater FD or PD than expected by chance. Indeed, mostly categories captured equal or less FD or PD than expected by chance. These findings would not have great consequences if Red Lists were not often considered as a major decision support tool for policy-making. Our results challenge the practice of investing conservation resources based only on species Red Lists because, from an ecological and evolutionary point of view, this would be the same as protecting similar or random sets of species. Thus, new prioritization methods, such as the EDGE of Existence initiative, should be developed and applied to conserve species' ecological traits and evolutionary histories at different spatial scales.
受威胁物种的红色名录在保护科学和实践中起着至关重要的作用。然而,基于红色名录的决策制定忽略了生物多样性丧失的生态和进化后果,因为这些名录仅关注物种本身。为了确定仅依靠红色名录是否有助于保护群落的功能(FD)和系统发育(PD)多样性,评估红色名录类别是否代表具有不同生态特征和进化历史的物种是有用的。此外,使用区域红色名录进行的本地尺度分析应代表更现实的共存物种群体,从而更好地捕捉 FD 和 PD 的最终损失。在这里,我们使用了 21 种生活史特征和所有巴西鸟类的系统发育,以确定 IUCN 全球红色名录、巴西国家和地区红色名录中分配的物种是否比随机预期更能捕捉 FD 和 PD。我们还构建了本地红色名录,并分析了它们是否在本地尺度上更能捕捉 FD 和 PD。此外,我们调查了个别威胁类别是否具有比随机预期更能捕捉 FD 和 PD 的物种。在任何给定的尺度上,威胁类别都没有比随机预期更能捕捉 FD 或 PD。事实上,大多数类别捕捉到的 FD 或 PD 与随机预期相等或更少。如果红色名录不经常被视为政策制定的主要决策支持工具,这些发现不会产生重大后果。我们的研究结果挑战了仅根据物种红色名录投入保护资源的做法,因为从生态和进化的角度来看,这与保护相似或随机的物种集没有什么不同。因此,应该开发和应用新的优先排序方法,例如 EDGE of Existence 倡议,以在不同的空间尺度上保护物种的生态特征和进化历史。