The role of habitat fragmentation in Pleistocene megafauna extinction in Eurasia

被引:17
作者
Mondanaro, Alessandro [1 ,2 ]
Di Febbraro, Mirko [3 ]
Melchionna, Marina [2 ]
Maiorano, Luigi [4 ]
Di Marco, Moreno [4 ]
Edwards, Neil R. [5 ]
Holden, Philip B. [5 ]
Castiglione, Silvia [2 ]
Rook, Lorenzo [1 ]
Raia, Pasquale [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Florence, Dept Earth Sci, Florence, Italy
[2] Univ Naples Federico II, Dept Earth Environm & Resources Sci, Naples, Italy
[3] Univ Molise, Dept Biosci & Terr, Pesche, Isernia, Italy
[4] Univ Roma La Sapienza, Dept Biol & Biotechnol Charles Darwin, Rome, Italy
[5] Open Univ, Sch Environm Earth & Ecosyst Sci, Milton Keynes, Bucks, England
关键词
habitat fragmentation; landscape metrics; linear mixed models; megafauna; species distribution models; species extinction; SPECIES DISTRIBUTION; R PACKAGE; CLIMATE; DISTRIBUTIONS; COMMUNITIES; COMPLEXITY; PREDICT; MODELS; MAXENT; RISK;
D O I
10.1111/ecog.05939
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
The idea that several small, rather than a single large, habitat areas should hold the highest total species richness (the so-called SLOSS debate) brings into question the importance of habitat fragmentation to extinction risk. SLOSS studies are generally addressed over a short time scale, potentially ignoring the long-term dimension of extinction risk. Here, we provide the first long-term evaluation of the role of habitat fragmentation in species extinction, focusing on 22 large mammal species that lived in Eurasia during the last 200 000 years. By combining species distribution models and landscape pattern analysis, we compared temporal dynamics of habitat spatial structure between extinct and extant species, estimating the size, number and degree of the geographical isolation of their suitable habitat patches. Our results evidenced that extinct mammals went through considerable habitat fragmentation during the last glacial period and started to fare worse than extant species from about 50 ka. In particular, our modelling effort constrains the fragmentation of habitats into a narrow time window, from 46 to 36 ka ago, surprisingly coinciding with known extinction dates of several megafauna species. Landscape spatial structure was the second most important driver affecting megafauna extinction risk (ca 38% importance), after body mass (ca 39%) and followed by dietary preferences (ca 20%). Our results indicate a major role played by landscape fragmentation on extinction. Such evidence provides insights on what might likely happen in the future, with climate change, habitat loss and fragmentation acting as the main forces exerting their negative effects on biodiversity.
引用
收藏
页码:1619 / 1630
页数:12
相关论文
共 90 条
  • [1] The past and future human impact on mammalian diversity
    Andermann, Tobias
    Faurby, Soren
    Turvey, Samuel T.
    Antonelli, Alexandre
    Silvestro, Daniele
    [J]. SCIENCE ADVANCES, 2020, 6 (36)
  • [2] Berger A., 1999, PARAMETERS EARTHS OR
  • [3] Megafauna extinctions have reduced biotic connectivity worldwide
    Berti, Emilio
    Svenning, Jens-Christian
    [J]. GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2020, 29 (12): : 2131 - 2142
  • [4] Species persistence in northerly glacial refugia of Europe: a matter of chance or biogeographical traits?
    Bhagwat, Shonil A.
    Willis, Katherine J.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2008, 35 (03) : 464 - 482
  • [5] Trapped in the extinction vortex? Strong genetic effects in a declining vertebrate population
    Blomqvist, Donald
    Pauliny, Angela
    Larsson, Mikael
    Flodin, Lars-Ake
    [J]. BMC EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, 2010, 10
  • [6] Random forests
    Breiman, L
    [J]. MACHINE LEARNING, 2001, 45 (01) : 5 - 32
  • [7] The influence of climate on species distribution over time and space during the late Quaternary
    Carotenuto, F.
    Di Febbraro, M.
    Melchionna, M.
    Castiglione, S.
    Saggese, F.
    Serio, C.
    Mondanaro, A.
    Passaro, F.
    Loy, A.
    Raia, P.
    [J]. QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2016, 149 : 188 - 199
  • [8] Accelerated modern human-induced species losses: Entering the sixth mass extinction
    Ceballos, Gerardo
    Ehrlich, Paul R.
    Barnosky, Anthony D.
    Garcia, Andres
    Pringle, Robert M.
    Palmer, Todd M.
    [J]. SCIENCE ADVANCES, 2015, 1 (05):
  • [9] Abrupt warming events drove Late Pleistocene Holarctic megafaunal turnover
    Cooper, Alan
    Turney, Chris
    Hughen, Konrad A.
    Brook, Barry W.
    McDonald, H. Gregory
    Bradshaw, Corey J. A.
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2015, 349 (6248) : 602 - 606
  • [10] Landscape Dynamics in an Iconic Watershed of Northwestern Mexico: Vegetation Condition Insights Using Landsat and PlanetScope Data
    Cornejo-Denman, Lara
    Raul Romo-Leon, Jose
    Hartfield, Kyle
    van Leeuwen, Willem J. D.
    Ponce-Campos, Guillermo E.
    Castellanos-Villegas, Alejandro
    [J]. REMOTE SENSING, 2020, 12 (16)