4.8 Article

Large numbers of vertebrates began rapid population decline in the late 19th century

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1616804113

Keywords

vertebrate; threatened species; coalescent; rapid population decline; conservation

Funding

  1. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB13040800]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91531306, 91231120, 91631304]
  3. 973 Project [2012CB316505]
  4. Yunnan Provincial Science and Technology Department

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Accelerated losses of biodiversity are a hallmark of the current era. Large declines of population size have been widely observed and currently 22,176 species are threatened by extinction. The time at which a threatened species began rapid population decline (RPD) and the rate of RPD provide important clues about the driving forces of population decline and anticipated extinction time. However, these parameters remain unknown for the vast majority of threatened species. Here we analyzed the genetic diversity data of nuclear and mitochondrial loci of 2,764 vertebrate species and found that the mean genetic diversity is lower in threatened species than in related nonthreatened species. Our coalescence-based modeling suggests that in many threatened species the RPD began similar to 123 y ago (a 95% confidence interval of 20-260 y). This estimated date coincides with widespread industrialization and a profound change in global living ecosystems over the past two centuries. On average the population size declined by similar to 25% every 10 y in a threatened species, and the population size was reduced to similar to 5% of its ancestral size. Moreover, the ancestral size of threatened species was, on average, similar to 22% smaller than that of nonthreatened species. Because the time period of RPD is short, the cumulative effect of RPD on genetic diversity is still not strong, so that the smaller ancestral size of threatened species may be the major cause of their reduced genetic diversity; RPD explains 24.1-37.5% of the difference in genetic diversity between threatened and nonthreatened species.

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