Litcius/Paper detail

Erosion of global functional diversity across the tree of life

Carlos P. Carmona, Riin Tamme, Meelis Pärtel, Francesco de Bello, Sébastien Brosse, Pol Capdevila, Roy González‐M., Manuela González‐Suárez, Roberto Salguero‐Gómez, Maribel Vásquez‐Valderrama, Aurèle Toussaint

2021Science Advances233 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Although one-quarter of plant and vertebrate species are threatened with extinction, little is known about the potential effect of extinctions on the global diversity of ecological strategies. Using trait and phylogenetic information for more than 75,000 species of vascular plants, mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and freshwater fish, we characterized the global functional spectra of each of these groups. Mapping extinction risk within these spectra showed that larger species with slower pace of life are universally threatened. Simulated extinction scenarios exposed extensive internal reorganizations in the global functional spectra, which were larger than expected by chance for all groups, and particularly severe for mammals and amphibians. Considering the disproportionate importance of the largest species for ecological processes, our results emphasize the importance of actions to prevent the extinction of the megabiota.

Topics & Concepts

Extinction (optical mineralogy)Diversity (politics)Tree of life (biology)Functional diversityErosionEcologyTree (set theory)BiodiversityBiologyEnvironmental scienceGeographyMathematicsPhylogeneticsPaleontologySociologyAnthropologyGeneMathematical analysisBiochemistryEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesAnimal Ecology and Behavior StudiesEcosystem dynamics and resilience