Large, particular bovids may require localised conservation effort to prevent extinction

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Large, particular bovids may require localised conservation effort to prevent extinction. / Traill, Lochran W.; Wanger, Thomas C.; Kidd, David.
In: Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, No. Supplement 25, 2012, p. 111-116.

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@article{31a403872aba4c299cac0f31566c078f,
title = "Large, particular bovids may require localised conservation effort to prevent extinction",
abstract = "Given growing human populations, concomitant resource use, and habitat transformation, ungulates face the localised extinction of numerous populations. Among ungulates, bovids are particularly vulnerable as many species are harvested as bushmeat and have large home range requirements. Here we determined the extent of geographic distribution and species richness (extent of range overlap) for bovids (Order, Artiodactyla, Family, Bovidae, n = 129), and used the IUCN Redlist status of species to determine life history, ecological and anthropogenic correlates of decline (sourced through the PanTHERIA database). Based on the extent of range overlap, we found that bovid species richness is relatively high in the tropics, particularly across central and east Africa. We used generalised linear mixed models and multimodel inference to determine the parameters associated with extirpation, accounting for evolutionary relatedness (random effects). The best predictor of bovid extinction risk was body mass. Overall model deviance explained was low (3% for the global model), suggesting that localised correlates of population decline (not accounted for at a macro-ecological scale) may be key to conservation effort. Our work highlights the extraordinary diversity of bovid species in the tropics and provides insight into important correlates of decline across the family. We encourage the prioritisation of conservation resources toward tropical bovids, with emphasis on large and range-restricted species.",
keywords = "Ecosystems Research, Extinction, Generalised linear models, Generalised linear models, Tropics, Ungulates, Sustainability Science, Biology, Bovidae, Tropics, Ungulates, Bovidae, Extinction",
author = "Traill, {Lochran W.} and Wanger, {Thomas C.} and David Kidd",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
pages = "111--116",
journal = "Raffles Bulletin of Zoology",
issn = "0217-2445",
publisher = "Centre for Medical Education (CenMed) Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine National University of Singapore",
number = "Supplement 25",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Large, particular bovids may require localised conservation effort to prevent extinction

AU - Traill, Lochran W.

AU - Wanger, Thomas C.

AU - Kidd, David

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - Given growing human populations, concomitant resource use, and habitat transformation, ungulates face the localised extinction of numerous populations. Among ungulates, bovids are particularly vulnerable as many species are harvested as bushmeat and have large home range requirements. Here we determined the extent of geographic distribution and species richness (extent of range overlap) for bovids (Order, Artiodactyla, Family, Bovidae, n = 129), and used the IUCN Redlist status of species to determine life history, ecological and anthropogenic correlates of decline (sourced through the PanTHERIA database). Based on the extent of range overlap, we found that bovid species richness is relatively high in the tropics, particularly across central and east Africa. We used generalised linear mixed models and multimodel inference to determine the parameters associated with extirpation, accounting for evolutionary relatedness (random effects). The best predictor of bovid extinction risk was body mass. Overall model deviance explained was low (3% for the global model), suggesting that localised correlates of population decline (not accounted for at a macro-ecological scale) may be key to conservation effort. Our work highlights the extraordinary diversity of bovid species in the tropics and provides insight into important correlates of decline across the family. We encourage the prioritisation of conservation resources toward tropical bovids, with emphasis on large and range-restricted species.

AB - Given growing human populations, concomitant resource use, and habitat transformation, ungulates face the localised extinction of numerous populations. Among ungulates, bovids are particularly vulnerable as many species are harvested as bushmeat and have large home range requirements. Here we determined the extent of geographic distribution and species richness (extent of range overlap) for bovids (Order, Artiodactyla, Family, Bovidae, n = 129), and used the IUCN Redlist status of species to determine life history, ecological and anthropogenic correlates of decline (sourced through the PanTHERIA database). Based on the extent of range overlap, we found that bovid species richness is relatively high in the tropics, particularly across central and east Africa. We used generalised linear mixed models and multimodel inference to determine the parameters associated with extirpation, accounting for evolutionary relatedness (random effects). The best predictor of bovid extinction risk was body mass. Overall model deviance explained was low (3% for the global model), suggesting that localised correlates of population decline (not accounted for at a macro-ecological scale) may be key to conservation effort. Our work highlights the extraordinary diversity of bovid species in the tropics and provides insight into important correlates of decline across the family. We encourage the prioritisation of conservation resources toward tropical bovids, with emphasis on large and range-restricted species.

KW - Ecosystems Research

KW - Extinction

KW - Generalised linear models

KW - Generalised linear models

KW - Tropics

KW - Ungulates

KW - Sustainability Science

KW - Biology

KW - Bovidae

KW - Tropics

KW - Ungulates

KW - Bovidae

KW - Extinction

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84878305772&partnerID=8YFLogxK

M3 - Journal articles

AN - SCOPUS:84878305772

SP - 111

EP - 116

JO - Raffles Bulletin of Zoology

JF - Raffles Bulletin of Zoology

SN - 0217-2445

IS - Supplement 25

ER -

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