作者
Jurriaan M De Vos, Lucas N Joppa, John L Gittleman, Patrick R Stephens, Stuart L Pimm
发表日期
2015/4
期刊
Conservation biology
卷号
29
期号
2
页码范围
452-462
简介
A key measure of humanity's global impact is by how much it has increased species extinction rates. Familiar statements are that these are 100–1000 times pre‐human or background extinction levels. Estimating recent rates is straightforward, but establishing a background rate for comparison is not. Previous researchers chose an approximate benchmark of 1 extinction per million species per year (E/MSY). We explored disparate lines of evidence that suggest a substantially lower estimate. Fossil data yield direct estimates of extinction rates, but they are temporally coarse, mostly limited to marine hard‐bodied taxa, and generally involve genera not species. Based on these data, typical background loss is 0.01 genera per million genera per year. Molecular phylogenies are available for more taxa and ecosystems, but it is debated whether they can be used to estimate separately speciation and extinction rates. We …
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学术搜索中的文章
JM De Vos, LN Joppa, JL Gittleman, PR Stephens… - Conservation biology, 2015