Xiao Qi, Shi Xiu-Dong, Shi Lin, Yao Zhong-Yi, Chen You-Hua, Yang Wei-Zhao, Liao Zi-Yan, Qi Yin
Chengdu Institute of Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chengdu, Sichuan 610299, China.
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 101408, China.
Zool Res. 2025 Jan 18;46(1):15-26. doi: 10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2024.287.
Assessing the threat status of species in response to global change is critical for biodiversity monitoring and conservation efforts. However, current frameworks, even the IUCN Red List, often neglect critical factors such as genetic diversity and the impacts of climate and land-use changes, hindering effective conservation planning. To address these limitations, we developed an enhanced extinction risk assessment framework using lizards as a model. This framework incorporates long-term field surveys, environmental data, and land-use information to predict distributional changes for 10 recently described species on the Qinghai-Xizang Plateau, which hold ecological significance but remain underassessed in conservation assessment. By integrating the distribution data and genetically inferred effective population sizes ( e), we conducted scenario analyses and used a rank-sum approach to calculate Risk ranking scores (RRS) for each species. This approach revealed significant discrepancies with the IUCN Red List assessments. Notably, and were identified as facing the highest extinction risk. Furthermore, , , , , , and , currently classified as "Least Concern", were found to warrant reclassification as "Vulnerable" due to considerable threat from projected range contractions. Exploring the relationship between morphology and RRS revealed that traits such as snout-vent length and relative tail length could serve as potential predictors of extinction risk, offering preliminary metrics for assessing species vulnerability when comprehensive data are unavailable. This study enhances the precision of extinction risk assessment frameworks and demonstrates their capacity to refine and update risk assessments, especially for lesser-known taxa.
评估物种应对全球变化的威胁状况对于生物多样性监测和保护工作至关重要。然而,当前的框架,甚至是国际自然保护联盟(IUCN)红色名录,往往忽视了遗传多样性以及气候和土地利用变化的影响等关键因素,从而阻碍了有效的保护规划。为了解决这些局限性,我们以蜥蜴为模型开发了一个强化的灭绝风险评估框架。该框架整合了长期的实地调查、环境数据和土地利用信息,以预测青藏高原上10个新描述物种的分布变化,这些物种具有生态意义,但在保护评估中仍未得到充分评估。通过整合分布数据和基因推断的有效种群大小(e),我们进行了情景分析,并使用秩和方法计算每个物种的风险排名分数(RRS)。这种方法揭示了与IUCN红色名录评估的显著差异。值得注意的是,[物种名称1]和[物种名称2]被确定面临最高的灭绝风险。此外,[物种名称3]、[物种名称4]、[物种名称5]、[物种名称6]、[物种名称7]和[物种名称8],目前被列为“无危”,由于预计的分布范围收缩带来的重大威胁,被发现有必要重新分类为“易危”。探索形态与RRS之间的关系表明,吻肛长度和相对尾长等特征可以作为灭绝风险的潜在预测指标,在缺乏全面数据时为评估物种脆弱性提供了初步指标。这项研究提高了灭绝风险评估框架的精度,并展示了它们完善和更新风险评估的能力,特别是对于鲜为人知的分类群。