Artículos de revistas
Defaunation in the Anthropocene
Fecha
2014-07-25Registro en:
Science. Washington: Amer Assoc Advancement Science, v. 345, n. 6195, p. 401-406, 2014.
0036-8075
10.1126/science.1251817
WOS:000339655100031
3431375174670630
Autor
Stanford University
University of California Santa Barbara
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
University College London
Institución
Resumen
We live amid a global wave of anthropogenically driven biodiversity loss: species and population extirpations and, critically, declines in local species abundance. Particularly, human impacts on animal biodiversity are an under-recognized form of global environmental change. Among terrestrial vertebrates, 322 species have become extinct since 1500, and populations of the remaining species show 25% average decline in abundance. Invertebrate patterns are equally dire: 67% of monitored populations show 45% mean abundance decline. Such animal declines will cascade onto ecosystem functioning and human well-being. Much remains unknown about this “Anthropocene defaunation”; these knowledge gaps hinder our capacity to predict and limit defaunation impacts. Clearly, however, defaunation is both a pervasive component of the planet’s sixth mass extinction and also a major driver of global ecological change.