Research School of Biology, Australian National University, 46 Sullivans Creek Rd, Acton, ACT 0200, Australia.
Research School of Biology, Australian National University, 46 Sullivans Creek Rd, Acton, ACT 0200, Australia; Landscape Ecology, Department of Environmental Systems Science, Institute of Terrestrial Ecosystems, ETH Zürich, CH-8092 Zürich, Switzerland.
Curr Biol. 2023 Apr 10;33(7):1381-1388.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.02.063.
Three major axes of global change put the world's mammal biodiversity at risk: climate change, human population growth, and land-use change. In some parts of the world the full effects of these threats on species will only be felt in decades to come, yet conservation emphasizes species currently threatened with extinction, by threats that have already occurred. There have been calls for conservation to become more proactive by anticipating and protecting species that may not yet be threatened, but have a high chance of becoming threatened in the future. We refer to this as "over-the-horizon" extinction risk, and we identify such species among the world's nonmarine mammals by considering not only the severity of increase in threats faced by each species, but also the way each species' biology confers sensitivity or robustness to threats. We define four future risk factors based on species' biology and projected exposure to severe change in climate, human population, and land use. We regard species with two or more of these risk factors as especially vulnerable to future extinction risk. Our models predict that by 2100 up to 1,057 (20%) of nonmarine mammal species will have combinations of two or more future risk factors. These species will be particularly concentrated in two future risk hotspots in sub-Saharan Africa and southern/eastern Australia. Proactively targeting species with over-the-horizon extinction risk could help to future-proof global conservation planning and prevent a new wave of mammal species from becoming threatened with extinction by the end of this century.
气候变化、人口增长和土地利用变化。在世界的某些地区,这些威胁对物种的全部影响只会在未来几十年才感受到,而保护强调的是当前受到已经发生的威胁而面临灭绝的物种。有人呼吁保护措施更加积极主动,预测和保护那些尚未受到威胁但将来很有可能受到威胁的物种。我们将这种情况称为“未来灭绝风险”,我们通过考虑每个物种面临的威胁增加的严重程度以及每个物种的生物学如何对威胁赋予敏感性或稳健性,来确定世界非海洋哺乳动物中的这些物种。我们根据物种的生物学和对气候变化、人口和土地利用严重变化的预期暴露情况,确定了四个未来风险因素。我们认为具有两个或更多这些风险因素的物种特别容易受到未来灭绝风险的影响。我们的模型预测,到 2100 年,多达 1,057 种(20%)非海洋哺乳动物物种将具有两个或更多未来风险因素的组合。这些物种将特别集中在撒哈拉以南非洲和澳大利亚南部/东部的两个未来风险热点地区。积极针对具有未来灭绝风险的物种,可能有助于为全球保护规划提供未来保障,并防止本世纪末又一波哺乳动物物种受到灭绝威胁。