4.6 Article

Correlates of extinction vulnerability in Canadian's prairie ecoregion

期刊

BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION
卷 30, 期 8-9, 页码 2495-2509

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10531-021-02206-7

关键词

Conservation; Extinction risk; Habitat breadth; Life form; Phylogenetic comparative models; Ploidy

资金

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)

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Identifying the correlates of extinction is crucial for prioritizing conservation efforts, with factors such as habitat breadth, ploidy, and life form contributing differently at national and provincial scales. Understanding the scale-dependent significance of these predictors is essential for accurately predicting extinction risk and improving conservation policies.
Identifying the correlates of extinction can help prioritize species for conservation effort, an important step when developing effective conservation policies. Most previous studies on extinction vulnerability have been restricted to a single predictor within a specific region. To understand the mechanism underlying predictors of extinction risk, an examination of the contribution of various factors at different scales is an important step. We investigated the contribution of phylogeny, ploidy level, habitat breadth, and life form on both provincial and national conservation ranks of Alberta's prairie ecoregion plant species. We collected data on conservation status, chromosome number, habitat breadth, and life form for 1274 species. We used phylogenetic comparative models to assess (1) the relative contribution, significance, and possible interaction of predictor variables in determining extinction vulnerability, and (2) the possible underlying mechanisms governing observed patterns of extinction vulnerability at the provincial and national level. We find that the contribution, significance, and predictive power of variables were often scale-dependent. While the impact of habitat breadth was significant at both provincial and national scales, ploidy and life form was only significant at the national and provincial level, respectively. We also found a significant negative interaction between ploidy and habitat breadth at both geographical scales, such that among widespread species (species with a higher habitat breadth), diploids are less likely to be at risk than polyploids. Our study reveals the importance of the study scale on the accuracy of extinction prediction. We also suggest that discriminating between regionally restricted and non-restricted species could improve the predictability of sub-global extinction patterns.

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