Effects of protected area coverage and research on conservation status of primates globally

Author:

Wang Zhining1ORCID,Chen Tao1ORCID,Yang Li1ORCID,Chapman Colin A.2345ORCID,Fan Pengfei1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Life Sciences Sun Yat‐sen University Guangzhou China

2. Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Washington District of Columbia USA

3. Biology Department Vancouver Island University Nanaimo British Columbia Canada

4. School of Life Sciences University of KwaZulu‐Natal KwaZulu‐Natal South Africa

5. The College of Life Sciences Northwest University Xi'an China

Abstract

AbstractConducting conservation research and establishing protected areas (PAs) based on research results are critical to biodiversity conservation. However, the effect of research and PAs on conservation of threatened species has rarely been evaluated simultaneously. We collected data on PAs from 2000 for 2021 and determined the number of publications on global primates (published from 1950 to 2021) to assess the effect of PAs, research, and biological and socioeconomic factors on the current International Union for Conservation of Nature endangered status and change in status. We used the MCMCglmm package to conduct a phylogenetic comparative analysis to control the phylogenetic relationship of primate species. The status of 24.6% (82 of 333) of species assessed at least twice declined. Only the black lion tamarin (Leontopithecus chrysopygus) had an improved status. Species with status declines mostly occurred on the south coast of West Africa and in Madagascar. PAs covered 22.1% of each species’ range. Forest loss in PAs (5.5%) was significantly lower than forest loss within 5 km outside PAs (13.8%), suggesting PAs effectively mitigated forest loss. Both the median number of total publications and conservation publications on critically endangered species were higher than those of other categories. Models showed that PA coverage and number of publications or conservation‐focused publications were not related to current status or change in status over time. A decline in status was not related to creation of PAs or increase of research since the last assessment. Our results suggest that current PAs and research are not reversing the extinction crisis of global primates. Doing more conservation‐oriented research, strengthening management of current PAs, and expanding PAs will be needed to protect primates globally.

Publisher

Wiley

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