Quantification of habitat fragmentation reveals extinction risk in terrestrial mammals

Colorado State University · Conservation Science Partners · +4 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Although habitat fragmentation is often assumed to be a primary driver of extinction, global patterns of fragmentation and its relationship to extinction risk have not been consistently quantified for any major animal taxon. We developed high-resolution habitat fragmentation models and used phylogenetic comparative methods to quantify the effects of habitat fragmentation on the world's terrestrial mammals, including 4,018 species across 26 taxonomic Orders. Results demonstrate that species with more fragmentation are at greater risk of extinction, even after accounting for the effects of key macroecological predictors, such as body size and geographic range size. Species with higher fragmentation had smaller…

Citation impact

535
total citations
FWCI
28.34
Percentile
100%
References
71
Citations per year

Authors

7

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Fragmentation (computing)
  • Habitat fragmentation
  • Extinction (optical mineralogy)
  • Habitat
  • Extinction debt
  • Ecology
  • Habitat destruction
  • Geography
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life in Land
No related works found for this paper.