Reconstructing mechanisms of extinctions to guide mammal conservation biogeography

Author:

Tomlinson Sean1ORCID,Lomolino Mark V.2,Woinarski John C. Z.3,Murphy Brett P.4,Reed Elizabeth15,Johnson Chris N.67,Legge Sarah89,Helgen Kristofer M.1011,Brown Stuart C.112,Fordham Damien A.11314

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences University of Adelaide North Terrace Adelaide South Australia 5000 Australia

2. College of Environmental and Forest Biology State University of New York 1 Forestry Drive Syracuse New York 13210 USA

3. Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods Charles Darwin University Darwin Northern Territory 0909 Australia

4. Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods Charles Darwin University Ellengowan Drive Casuarina Darwin Northern Territory 0810 Australia

5. Earth and Biological Sciences, Palaeontology South Australian Museum Adelaide South Australia 5000 Australia

6. Discipline of Biological Sciences University of Tasmania Churchill Ave Hobart Hobart Tasmania 7005 Australia

7. Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage University of Tasmania Churchill Ave Hobart Hobart Tasmania 7005 Australia

8. Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science The University of Queensland St Lucia Queensland 4072 Australia

9. The Fenner School of Environment & Society The Australian National University Canberra Australian Capital Territory 2600 Australia

10. Australian Museum Research Institute 1 William St Sydney New South Wales 2000 Australia

11. Australian Research Council Centre for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage University of New South Wales High St Kensington Sydney New South Wales 2052 Australia

12. Globe Institute University of Copenhagen Øster Farimagsgade 5 1353 København K Denmark

13. Center for Macroecology, Evolution, and Climate, GLOBE Institute University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

14. Center for Global Mountain Biodiversity, GLOBE Institute University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

Abstract

AbstractAn emerging research program on population and geographic range dynamics of Australia's mammals illustrates an approach to better understand and respond to geographic range collapses of threatened wildlife in general. In 1788, Europeans colonized an Australia with a diverse and largely endemic mammal fauna, where many species that are now extinct or threatened were common and widespread. Subsequent population declines, range collapses and extinctions were caused by introduced predators and herbivores, altered land use, modified fire regimes and the synergies between these threats. Declines in population and range size continue for many Australian mammals despite legislative protection and conservation interventions. Here, we propose an approach that integrates museum data and other historical records into process‐explicit macroecological models to better resolve mammal distributions and abundances as they were at European arrival. We then illustrate how this integrative approach can identify the likely synergistic mechanisms causing mammal population declines across these and other landscapes. This emerging research approach, undertaken with fine temporal and spatial resolution, but at large geographic scales, will provide valuable insights into the different pathways to, and drivers of, extinction. Such insights may, in turn, underpin conservation strategies based on a process‐explicit understanding of population decline and range collapse under alternative scenarios of impending climate and environmental change. Given that similar information is available for other regional biotas, the approach we describe here can be adapted to conserve threatened wildlife in other regions across the globe.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference127 articles.

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