reviewScienceJul 24, 2014GREEN OA

Defaunation in the Anthropocene

Stanford University · University of California, Santa Barbara · +5 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

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…

Citation impact

4,104
total citations
FWCI
242.31
Percentile
100%
References
164
Citations per year

Authors

6

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Defaunation
  • Anthropocene
  • Biodiversity
  • Abundance (ecology)
  • Ecology
  • Extinction (optical mineralogy)
  • Population
  • Environmental change
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life in Land
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