Moura Nárgila G, Lees Alexander C, Aleixo Alexandre, Barlow Jos, Dantas Sidnei M, Ferreira Joice, Lima Maria de Fátima C, Gardner Toby A
Curso de Pós-Graduação de Zoologia, Universidade Federal do Pará/Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Caixa Postal 399, CEP 66040-170, Belém, Pará, Brazil.
Conserv Biol. 2014 Oct;28(5):1271-81. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12300. Epub 2014 Apr 29.
Local, regional, and global extinctions caused by habitat loss, degradation, and fragmentation have been widely reported for the tropics. The patterns and drivers of this loss of species are now increasingly well known in Amazonia, but there remains a significant gap in understanding of long-term trends in species persistence and extinction in anthropogenic landscapes. Such a historical perspective is critical for understanding the status and trends of extant biodiversity as well as for identifying priorities to halt further losses. Using extensive historical data sets of specimen records and results of contemporary surveys, we searched for evidence of local extinctions of a terra firma rainforest avifauna over 200 years in a 2500 km(2) eastern Amazonian region around the Brazilian city of Belém. This region has the longest history of ornithological fieldwork in the entire Amazon basin and lies in the highly threatened Belém Centre of Endemism. We also compared our historically inferred extinction events with extensive data on species occurrences in a sample of catchments in a nearby municipality (Paragominas) that encompass a gradient of past forest loss. We found evidence for the possible extinction of 47 species (14% of the regional species pool) that were unreported from 1980 to 2013 (80% last recorded between 1900 and 1980). Seventeen species appear on the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List, and many of these are large-bodied. The species lost from the region immediately around Belém are similar to those which are currently restricted to well-forested catchments in Paragominas. Although we anticipate the future rediscovery or recolonization of some species inferred to be extinct by our calculations, we also expect that there are likely to be additional local extinctions, not reported here, given the ongoing loss and degradation of remaining areas of native vegetation across eastern Amazonia.
因栖息地丧失、退化和破碎化导致的局部、区域和全球物种灭绝现象在热带地区已被广泛报道。目前,亚马逊地区物种丧失的模式和驱动因素已广为人知,但对于人为景观中物种持久性和灭绝的长期趋势,我们的认识仍存在重大差距。这样的历史视角对于理解现存生物多样性的现状和趋势,以及确定阻止进一步损失的优先事项至关重要。利用大量标本记录的历史数据集和当代调查结果,我们在巴西贝伦市周边2500平方公里的亚马逊东部地区,探寻了200多年来陆地雨林鸟类群落局部灭绝的证据。该地区在整个亚马逊盆地拥有最长的鸟类学野外工作历史,且位于高度濒危的贝伦特有中心。我们还将历史推断的灭绝事件与附近一个市镇(帕拉戈米纳斯)集水区样本中物种出现的广泛数据进行了比较,该样本涵盖了过去森林损失的梯度变化。我们发现有证据表明,47个物种(占区域物种库的14%)可能已经灭绝,这些物种在1980年至2013年期间未被记录(80%的物种最后一次记录时间在1900年至1980年之间)。17个物种出现在国际自然保护联盟红色名录上,其中许多是大型物种。贝伦周边地区消失的物种与目前仅限于帕拉戈米纳斯森林茂密集水区的物种相似。尽管我们预计未来会重新发现或重新定殖一些经我们计算推断已灭绝的物种,但鉴于整个亚马逊东部地区原生植被剩余区域仍在持续丧失和退化,我们也预计可能还有其他未在此报告的局部灭绝事件发生。