4.6 Article

Scaling range sizes to threats for robust predictions of risks to biodiversity

期刊

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
卷 32, 期 2, 页码 322-332

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.12988

关键词

IUCN Red List of Ecosystems; IUCN Red List of Threatened Species; landscape modeling; risk assessment; spatial scale; species distribution; threatening process

资金

  1. Australian Research Council [LP130100435]
  2. MAVA Foundation
  3. National Science Foundation [DEB-1146198]
  4. Australian Research Council [LP130100435] Funding Source: Australian Research Council
  5. Division Of Environmental Biology
  6. Direct For Biological Sciences [1146198] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Assessments of risk to biodiversity often rely on spatial distributions of species and ecosystems. Range-size metrics used extensively in these assessments, such as area of occupancy (AOO), are sensitive to measurement scale, prompting proposals to measure them at finer scales or at different scales based on the shape of the distribution or ecological characteristics of the biota. Despite its dominant role in red-list assessments for decades, appropriate spatial scales of AOO for predicting risks of species' extinction or ecosystem collapse remain untested and contentious. There are no quantitative evaluations of the scale-sensitivity of AOO as a predictor of risks, the relationship between optimal AOO scale and threat scale, or the effect of grid uncertainty. We used stochastic simulation models to explore risks to ecosystems and species with clustered, dispersed, and linear distribution patterns subject to regimes of threat events with different frequency and spatial extent. Area of occupancy was an accurate predictor of risk (0.81 < vertical bar r vertical bar < 0.98) and performed optimally when measured with grid cells 0.1-1.0 times the largest plausible area threatened by an event. Contrary to previous assertions, estimates of AOO at these relatively coarse scales were better predictors of risk than finer-scale estimates of AOO (e.g., when measurement cells are < 1% of the area of the largest threat). The optimal scale depended on the spatial scales of threats more than the shape or size of biotic distributions. Although we found appreciable potential for grid-measurement errors, current IUCN guidelines for estimating AOO neutralize geometric uncertainty and incorporate effective scaling procedures for assessing risks posed by landscape-scale threats to species and ecosystems.

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