Publication | Open Access
Predicting extinction risk in declining species
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BiologyBiodiversity LossBiodiversityHigh Extinction RiskPredispose SpeciesEngineeringNatural SciencesMammalogyEvolutionary BiologyBiodiversity ConservationEndangered Species BiologyPopulation EcologyLatent Extinction RiskConservation BiologyExtinction Risk
Many hypotheses exist, but no systematic analysis has yet discriminated between them. The study seeks to identify biological attributes that predispose species to extinction risk. High trophic level, low population density, slow life history, and small geographic range size are independently linked to higher extinction risk, explaining almost 50 % of interspecies variation, while anthropogenic factors account for much of the remaining variation.
What biological attributes predispose species to the risk of extinction? There are many hypotheses but so far there has been no systematic analysis for discriminating between them. Using complete phylogenies of contemporary carnivores and primates, we present, to our knowledge, the first comparative test showing that high trophic level, low population density slow life history and, in particular, small geographical range size are all significantly and independently associated with a high extinction risk in declining species. These traits together explain nearly 50% of the total between-species variation in extinction risk. Much of the remaining variation can be accounted for by external anthropogenic factors that affect species irrespective of their biology.
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