Affiliation:
1. The Peregrine Fund Boise Idaho USA
2. Instituto Multidisciplinario sobre Ecosistemas y Desarrollo Sustentable‐CICPBA Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires Tandil Argentina
3. Wolf Creek Operating Foundation Wolf Wyoming USA
4. RSPB Centre for Conservation Science Royal Society for the Protection of Birds Edinburgh UK
5. EDGE of Existence Programme Zoological Society of London London UK
6. Department of Life Sciences Imperial College London Berkshire UK
Abstract
AbstractIn the midst of the sixth mass extinction, limited resources are forcing conservationists to prioritize which species and places will receive conservation action. Evolutionary distinctiveness measures the isolation of a species on its phylogenetic tree. Combining a species’ evolutionary distinctiveness with its globally endangered status creates an EDGE score. We use EDGE scores to prioritize the places and species that should be managed to conserve bird evolutionary history. We analyzed all birds in all countries and important bird areas. We examined parrots, raptors, and seabirds in depth because these groups are especially threatened and relatively speciose. The three focal groups had greater median threatened evolutionary history than other taxa, making them important for conserving bird evolutionary history. Australia, Brazil, Indonesia, Madagascar, New Zealand, and the Philippines were especially critical countries for bird conservation because they had the most threatened evolutionary history for endemic birds and are important for parrots, raptors, and seabirds. Increased enforcement of international agreements for the conservation of parrots, raptors, and seabirds is needed because these agreements protect hundreds of millions of years of threatened bird evolutionary history. Decisive action is required to conserve the evolutionary history of birds into the Anthropocene.
Subject
Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
3 articles.
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