Global patterns of resilience decline in vertebrate populations

Maintaining the resilience of natural populations, their ability to resist and recover from disturbance, is crucial to prevent biodiversity loss. However, the lack of appropriate data and quantitative tools has hampered our understanding of the factors determining resilience on a global scale. Here,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecology letters 2022-01, Vol.25 (1), p.240-251
Hauptverfasser: Capdevila, Pol, Noviello, Nicola, McRae, Louise, Freeman, Robin, Clements, Christopher F., Chase, Jonathan
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container_end_page 251
container_issue 1
container_start_page 240
container_title Ecology letters
container_volume 25
creator Capdevila, Pol
Noviello, Nicola
McRae, Louise
Freeman, Robin
Clements, Christopher F.
Chase, Jonathan
description Maintaining the resilience of natural populations, their ability to resist and recover from disturbance, is crucial to prevent biodiversity loss. However, the lack of appropriate data and quantitative tools has hampered our understanding of the factors determining resilience on a global scale. Here, we quantified the temporal trends of two key components of resilience—resistance and recovery—in >2000 population time‐series of >1000 vertebrate species globally. We show that the number of threats to which a population is exposed is the main driver of resilience decline in vertebrate populations. Such declines are driven by a non‐uniform loss of different components of resilience (i.e. resistance and recovery). Increased anthropogenic threats accelerating resilience loss through a decline in the recovery ability—but not resistance—of vertebrate populations. These findings suggest we may be underestimating the impacts of global change, highlighting the need to account for the multiple components of resilience in global biodiversity assessments. The resilience of vertebrate populations is declining worldwide. Multiple threats are accelerating this loss of resilience.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/ele.13927
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source MEDLINE; Access via Wiley Online Library
subjects Animals
Anthropogenic factors
Biodiversity
Biodiversity loss
conservation
Conservation of Natural Resources
Ecosystem
extinctions
fauna
global change
Human influences
long‐term time‐series
multiple stressors
Natural populations
Populations
Recovery
Resilience
Vertebrates
wildlife
title Global patterns of resilience decline in vertebrate populations
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