Comparative Losses of British Butterflies, Birds, and Plants and the Global Extinction Crisis
Butterfly Conservation · UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology · +3 more institutions
Abstract
There is growing concern about increased population, regional, and global extinctions of species. A key question is whether extinction rates for one group of organisms are representative of other taxa. We present a comparison at the national scale of population and regional extinctions of birds, butterflies, and vascular plants from Britain in recent decades. Butterflies experienced the greatest net losses, disappearing on average from 13% of their previously occupied 10-kilometer squares. If insects elsewhere in the world are similarly sensitive, the known global extinction rates of vertebrate and plant species have an unrecorded parallel among the invertebrates, strengthening the hypothesis that the natural…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 78.66
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 24
Authors
9- JAJeremy A. ThomasCorresponding
Butterfly Conservation, UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Dorset Green Technology Park, Imperial College London, British Trust for Ornithology
- MGMark G. TelferCorresponding
Butterfly Conservation, UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Dorset Green Technology Park, Imperial College London, British Trust for Ornithology
- DBDavid B. Roy
Butterfly Conservation, UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Dorset Green Technology Park, Imperial College London, British Trust for Ornithology
- CPChris Preston
Butterfly Conservation, UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Dorset Green Technology Park, Imperial College London, British Trust for Ornithology
- JJJeremy J. D. Greenwood
Butterfly Conservation, UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Dorset Green Technology Park, Imperial College London, British Trust for Ornithology
Topics & keywords
- Extinction (optical mineralogy)
- Invertebrate
- Ecology
- Extinction event
- Population
- Geography
- Biology
- Taxon
- Life in Land