Fernández-Palacios José María, Fructuoso Melania, Illera Juan Carlos, Rando Juan Carlos, de Nascimento Lea, Fernández-Palacios Enrique, Patiño Jairo, Otto Rüdiger, Castilla-Beltrán Álvaro, Martín González Esther, Orihuela-Rivero Raúl, Alcover Josep Antoni, Whittaker Robert J
Grupo de Ecología y Biogeografía Insular, Departamento de Botánica, Ecología y Fisiología Vegetal e Instituto Universitario de Enfermedades Tropicales y Salud Pública de Canarias, Universidad de La Laguna, San Cristóbal de La Laguna, 38200 Tenerife, Spain.
Biodiversity Research Institute (CSIC-Oviedo University-Principality of Asturias), University of Oviedo, 33600 Mieres, Asturias, Spain.
PNAS Nexus. 2025 Aug 5;4(8):pgaf215. doi: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgaf215. eCollection 2025 Aug.
We present the first synthesis of all known terrestrial endemic species extinctions in the biogeographical region of Macaronesia, covering all archipelagos (Azores, Madeira, Selvagens, the Canaries, and Cabo Verde) and multiple taxa (arthropods, birds, bryophytes, fungi, land molluscs, lichens, mammals, reptiles, and vascular plants). This list also includes information on the original distribution of extinct species, extinction chronologies, and likely causes of extinction, as reported by the original works' authors. Our survey identified 220 extinction records, with the highest numbers observed among land snails (111 species), arthropods (55), birds (27), and reptiles (15). The proportional impact of extinction was greatest among vertebrates: birds (50% of the original endemics lost), mammals (43%), and reptiles (28%). Very few extinctions were recorded in vascular plants or bryophytes, and none in fungi or lichens. However, these low levels of loss may partly reflect the scarcity of historical and fossil records for these taxa. Exactly half of the recorded endemic species losses (including nearly all vertebrates, as well as the arthropods and vascular plants) have extinction chronologies matching with the human occupation of the islands, providing a minimum estimate of the number of extinction events that may be directly or indirectly attributed to human activities.
我们首次汇总了马卡罗尼西亚生物地理区域内所有已知的陆地特有物种灭绝情况,涵盖了所有群岛(亚速尔群岛、马德拉群岛、塞尔瓦任斯群岛、加那利群岛和佛得角)以及多个分类群(节肢动物、鸟类、苔藓植物、真菌、陆地软体动物、地衣、哺乳动物、爬行动物和维管植物)。这份清单还包含了灭绝物种的原始分布、灭绝时间顺序以及灭绝的可能原因等信息,这些信息均来自原始研究的作者报告。我们的调查确定了220条灭绝记录,其中陆地蜗牛(111种)、节肢动物(55种)、鸟类(27种)和爬行动物(15种)的灭绝记录数量最多。灭绝的比例影响在脊椎动物中最为显著:鸟类(原有特有物种的50%消失)、哺乳动物(43%)和爬行动物(28%)。维管植物或苔藓植物的灭绝记录非常少,真菌和地衣则没有灭绝记录。然而,这些低水平的损失可能部分反映了这些分类群历史记录和化石记录的稀缺性。记录的特有物种损失中恰好有一半(包括几乎所有脊椎动物,以及节肢动物和维管植物)的灭绝时间顺序与人类在这些岛屿上的活动时间相匹配,这为可能直接或间接归因于人类活动的灭绝事件数量提供了一个最低估计。