Museum für Naturkunde, Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science, Invalidenstrasse 43, 10115 Berlin, Germany; Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Understanding Evolution Group, Darwinweg 2, 2333 CR Leiden, the Netherlands; University of Groningen, Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences, P.O. Box 11103, 9700 CC Groningen, the Netherlands.
University of Groningen, Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences, P.O. Box 11103, 9700 CC Groningen, the Netherlands.
Curr Biol. 2019 Aug 5;29(15):2563-2569.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.06.058.
Islands are at the frontline of the anthropogenic extinction crisis [1]. A vast number of island birds have gone extinct since human colonization [2], and an important proportion is currently threatened with extinction [3]. While the number of lost or threatened avian species has often been quantified [4], the macroevolutionary consequences of human impact on island biodiversity have rarely been measured [5]. Here, we estimate the amount of evolutionary time that has been lost or is under threat due to anthropogenic activity in a classic example, New Zealand. Half of its bird taxa have gone extinct since humans arrived [6, 7] and many are threatened [8], including lineages forming highly distinct branches in the avian tree of life [9-11]. Using paleontological and ancient DNA information, we compiled a dated phylogenetic dataset for New Zealand's terrestrial avifauna. We extend the method DAISIE developed for island biogeography [12] to allow for the fact that many of New Zealand's birds are evolutionarily isolated and use it to estimate natural rates of speciation, extinction, and colonization. Simulating under a range of human-induced extinction scenarios, we find that it would take approximately 50 million years (Ma) to recover the number of species lost since human colonization of New Zealand and up to 10 Ma to return to today's species numbers if currently threatened species go extinct. This study puts into macroevolutionary perspective the impact of humans in an isolated fauna and reveals how conservation decisions we take today will have repercussions for millions of years.
岛屿处于人为灭绝危机的前沿[1]。自人类殖民以来,大量的岛屿鸟类已经灭绝[2],目前有很大一部分面临灭绝的威胁[3]。虽然已经经常对失去或受到威胁的鸟类物种的数量进行了量化[4],但人类对岛屿生物多样性的影响的宏观进化后果却很少被测量[5]。在这里,我们以新西兰这个经典例子来估计由于人类活动而失去或受到威胁的进化时间量。自从人类到达以来,新西兰有一半的鸟类分类群已经灭绝[6,7],而且许多鸟类受到威胁[8],包括在鸟类生命树中形成高度独特分支的谱系[9-11]。我们利用古生物学和古代 DNA 信息,为新西兰的陆地鸟类编制了一个有时间戳的系统发育数据集。我们扩展了 DAISIE 岛生物地理学方法[12],以适应新西兰许多鸟类在进化上是孤立的这一事实,并利用它来估计自然的物种形成、灭绝和殖民化速度。在一系列人为灭绝情景下进行模拟,我们发现,要恢复自人类殖民新西兰以来失去的物种数量,大约需要 5000 万年(Ma),如果目前受到威胁的物种灭绝,那么需要 1000 万年才能恢复到今天的物种数量。这项研究从宏观进化的角度揭示了人类在孤立动物群中的影响,并表明我们今天做出的保护决策将对未来数百万年产生影响。