4.7 Article

Where the wild things were: intrinsic and extrinsic extinction predictors in the world's most depleted mammal fauna

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2020.2905

关键词

Caribbean; extinction risk; Holocene; island extinctions; late Quaternary; West Indies

资金

  1. Leverhulme Trust [ECF/2004/0410]
  2. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/D009456/1]
  3. Royal Society [UF080320/130573]
  4. National Science Foundation [DEB 1442142, 1838273, DGE 1633299, DEB 1441737, OAC 1531492]
  5. National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center (SESYNC) from the National Science Foundation [DBI 1639145]
  6. Direct For Biological Sciences
  7. Division Of Environmental Biology [1838273] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  8. NERC [NE/D009456/1] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study revealed a complex relationship between survival or extinction of mammals in the Caribbean region and factors such as body mass, island elevation, age of first human arrival, and hurricane frequency. Intermediate-sized species were found to be more resilient, while larger mammals tended to go extinct on islands colonized earliest. Lower elevation islands showed higher survival probability, while islands with more frequent hurricanes faced greater extinction risk.
Preventing extinctions requires understanding macroecological patterns of vulnerability or persistence. However, correlates of risk can be nonlinear, within-species risk varies geographically, and current-day threats cannot reveal drivers of past losses. We investigated factors that regulated survival or extinction in Caribbean mammals, which have experienced the globally highest level of human-caused postglacial mammalian extinctions, and included all extinct and extant Holocene island populations of non-volant species (219 survivals or extinctions across 118 islands). Extinction selectivity shows a statistically detectable and complex body mass effect, with survival probability decreasing for both mass extremes, indicating that intermediate-sized species have been more resilient. A strong interaction between mass and age of first human arrival provides quantitative evidence of larger mammals going extinct on the earliest islands colonized, revealing an extinction filter caused by past human activities. Survival probability increases on islands with lower mean elevation (mostly small cays acting as offshore refugia) and decreases with more frequent hurricanes, highlighting the risk of extreme weather events and rising sea levels to surviving species on low-lying cays. These findings demonstrate the interplay between intrinsic biology, regional ecology and specific local threats, providing insights for understanding drivers of biodiversity loss across island systems and fragmented habitats worldwide.

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