Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
Ecol Lett. 2018 Oct;21(10):1530-1540. doi: 10.1111/ele.13133. Epub 2018 Aug 21.
Humans continue to alter terrestrial ecosystems, but our understanding of how biodiversity responds is still limited. Anthropogenic habitat conversion has been associated with the loss of evolutionarily distinct bird species at local scales, but whether this evolutionary pattern holds across other clades is unknown. We collate a global dataset on amphibian assemblages in intact forests and nearby human-modified sites to assess whether evolutionary history influences susceptibility to land conversion. We found that evolutionarily distinct amphibian species are disproportionately lost when forested habitats are converted to alternative land-uses. We tested the hypothesis that grassland-associated amphibian lineages have both higher diversification and are pre-adapted to human landscapes, but found only weak evidence supporting this. The loss of evolutionarily distinct amphibians with land conversion suggests that preserving remnant forests will be vital if we aim to preserve the amphibian tree of life in the face of mounting anthropogenic pressures.
人类仍在不断改变陆地生态系统,但我们对生物多样性如何响应的理解仍然有限。人为的栖息地转换与当地尺度上进化独特的鸟类物种的丧失有关,但这种进化模式是否适用于其他进化枝尚不清楚。我们整理了一个关于完整森林和附近人为改造地点的两栖动物组合的全球数据集,以评估进化历史是否会影响对土地转换的易感性。我们发现,当森林栖息地被转换为替代用途时,进化独特的两栖动物物种不成比例地丧失。我们检验了这样一个假设,即与草原相关的两栖动物谱系具有更高的多样性,并且预先适应了人类景观,但只发现了微弱的证据支持这一假设。随着土地转换而失去进化独特的两栖动物表明,如果我们要在人为压力下保护两栖动物的生命之树,保护残余森林将至关重要。