Author:
Myers Norman,Knoll Andrew H.
Abstract
The biotic crisis overtaking our planet is likely to precipitate a
major extinction of species. That much is well known. Not so well known
but probably more significant in the long term is that the crisis will
surely disrupt and deplete certain basic processes of evolution, with
consequences likely to persist for millions of years. Distinctive
features of future evolution could include a homogenization of biotas,
a proliferation of opportunistic species, a pest-and-weed ecology, an
outburst of speciation among taxa that prosper in human-dominated
ecosystems, a decline of biodisparity, an end to the speciation of
large vertebrates, the depletion of “evolutionary powerhouses” in
the tropics, and unpredictable emergent novelties. Despite this
likelihood, we have only a rudimentary understanding of how we are
altering the evolutionary future. As a result of our ignorance,
conservation policies fail to reflect long-term evolutionary aspects of
biodiversity loss.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
221 articles.
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