Department of Environmental Science, Radboud Institute for Biological and Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Science, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, The Hague, The Netherlands.
Conserv Biol. 2022 Oct;36(5):e13942. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13942. Epub 2022 Sep 20.
Biodiversity is severely threatened by habitat destruction. As a consequence of habitat destruction, the remaining habitat becomes more fragmented. This results in time-lagged population extirpations in remaining fragments when these are too small to support populations in the long term. If these time-lagged effects are ignored, the long-term impacts of habitat loss and fragmentation will be underestimated. We quantified the magnitude of time-lagged effects of habitat fragmentation for 157 nonvolant terrestrial mammal species in Madagascar, one of the biodiversity hotspots with the highest rates of habitat loss and fragmentation. We refined species' geographic ranges based on habitat preferences and elevation limits and then estimated which habitat fragments were too small to support a population for at least 100 years given stochastic population fluctuations. We also evaluated whether time-lagged effects would change the threat status of species according to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List assessment framework. We used allometric relationships to obtain the population parameters required to simulate the population dynamics of each species, and we quantified the consequences of uncertainty in these parameter estimates by repeating the analyses with a range of plausible parameter values. Based on the median outcomes, we found that for 34 species (22% of the 157 species) at least 10% of their current habitat contained unviable populations. Eight species (5%) had a higher threat status when accounting for time-lagged effects. Based on 0.95-quantile values, following a precautionary principle, for 108 species (69%) at least 10% of their habitat contained unviable populations, and 51 species (32%) had a higher threat status. Our results highlight the need to preserve continuous habitat and improve connectivity between habitat fragments. Moreover, our findings may help to identify species for which time-lagged effects are most severe and which may thus benefit the most from conservation actions.
生物多样性受到栖息地破坏的严重威胁。由于栖息地的破坏,剩余的栖息地变得更加碎片化。这导致当剩余的栖息地过于小时,剩余的栖息地中的种群在长时间内无法维持。如果忽略这些时滞效应,栖息地丧失和破碎化的长期影响将被低估。我们量化了马达加斯加 157 种非飞行动物陆地哺乳动物的栖息地破碎化的时滞效应的程度,马达加斯加是生物多样性热点地区之一,也是栖息地丧失和破碎化速度最快的地区之一。我们根据栖息地偏好和海拔限制细化了物种的地理范围,然后估算了哪些栖息地片段太小,无法在随机种群波动的情况下支持至少 100 年的种群。我们还评估了时滞效应是否会根据国际自然保护联盟(IUCN)红色名录评估框架改变物种的威胁状况。我们使用了种间体型关系来获取模拟每个物种种群动态所需的种群参数,并通过在一系列合理的参数值范围内重复分析来量化这些参数估计不确定性的后果。基于中位数结果,我们发现,对于 34 种物种(157 种物种中的 22%),其当前栖息地的至少 10%包含无法维持生存的种群。当考虑到时滞效应时,有 8 种物种(5%)的威胁状况更高。基于 0.95 分位数值,遵循预防原则,对于 108 种物种(69%),其栖息地的至少 10%包含无法维持生存的种群,而 51 种物种(32%)的威胁状况更高。我们的研究结果强调了保护连续栖息地和改善栖息地碎片之间连通性的必要性。此外,我们的研究结果可能有助于确定时滞效应最严重的物种,以及可能因此从保护行动中受益最多的物种。