Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, School of Biosciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK; Bird Group, Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, Akeman Street, Tring HP23 6AP, UK.
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, School of Biosciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK.
Curr Biol. 2022 Sep 12;32(17):3830-3837.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.06.018. Epub 2022 Jul 21.
Biodiversity is facing a global extinction crisis that will reduce ecological trait diversity, evolutionary history, and ultimately ecosystem functioning and services. A key challenge is understanding how species losses will impact morphological and phylogenetic diversity at global scales. Here, we test whether the loss of species threatened with extinction according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) leads to morphological and phylogenetic homogenization across both the whole avian class and within each biome and ecoregion globally. We use a comprehensive set of continuous morphological traits extracted from museum collections of 8,455 bird species, including geometric morphometric beak shape data, and sequentially remove species from those at most to least threat of extinction. We find evidence of morphological, but not phylogenetic, homogenization across the avian class, with species becoming more alike in terms of their morphology. We find that most biome and ecoregions are expected to lose morphological diversity at a greater rate than predicted by species loss alone, with the most imperiled regions found in East Asia and the Himalayan uplands and foothills. Only a small proportion of assemblages are threatened with phylogenetic homogenization, in particular parts of Indochina. Species extinctions will lead to a major loss of avian ecological strategies, but not a comparable loss of phylogenetic diversity. As the decline of species with unique traits and their replacement with more widespread generalist species continues, the protection of assemblages at most risk of morphological and phylogenetic homogenization should be a key conservation priority.
生物多样性正面临全球性灭绝危机,这将降低生态特征多样性、进化历史,并最终影响生态系统功能和服务。一个关键的挑战是了解物种的丧失将如何影响全球范围内的形态和系统发育多样性。在这里,我们检验了根据国际自然保护联盟(IUCN)濒危物种标准的物种丧失是否会导致整个鸟类纲以及全球每个生物群落和生态区的形态和系统发育趋同。我们使用了从 8455 种鸟类的博物馆收藏中提取的一套全面的连续形态特征,包括几何形态的鸟喙形状数据,并按威胁程度从最高到最低的顺序逐个移除物种。我们发现鸟类纲的形态趋同证据,但没有系统发育趋同,物种在形态上变得更加相似。我们发现,大多数生物群落和生态区的形态多样性预计将以比仅由物种丧失预测的更高的速度丧失,而在东亚和喜马拉雅高地和山麓地区发现了最受威胁的地区。只有一小部分集合面临系统发育趋同的威胁,特别是在印度支那的部分地区。物种灭绝将导致鸟类生态策略的重大损失,但不会导致系统发育多样性的可比损失。随着具有独特特征的物种的减少及其被更广泛的一般性物种所取代,保护最容易受到形态和系统发育趋同影响的集合应成为保护的重点。