Use of historical and contemporary distribution of mammals in China to inform conservation |
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Authors: | Kang Huang He Zhang Chengliang Wang Rong Hou Pei Zhang Gang He Songtao Guo Shiyi Tang Baoguo Li Charles Oxnard Ruliang Pan |
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Affiliation: | 1. Shaanxi Key Laboratory for Animal Conservation, College of Life Sciences, Northwest University, Xi'an, China;2. Shaanxi Institute of Zoology, Xian, China;3. School of Human Sciences, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia |
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Abstract: | A systematic understanding of dynamic animal extinction trajectories for different regions in a nation like China is critically important to developing practical conservation strategies. We explored historical and contemporary changes in terrestrial mammalian diversity to determine how diversity in each of the 5 regions in China has changed over time and to examine the conservation potential of these regions. We used records from databases on Pleistocene mammalian fossils and historical distribution records (1175–2020) for Primates (as a case study) to reconstruct evolutionary and historical distribution trajectories of the 11 orders of terrestrial mammals and to predict their prospective survival based on the national conservation strategy applied. The results indicated that since the Pleistocene, 4–5 mammalian orders have been lost in the northeast, 3 in central China, 2 along the coast, and 1 in the northwest. In the southwest, all 11 orders were maintained. Contemporarily, the coast and southwest had the highest and second-highest species densities. The southwest region and southeastern sections of the northwest region were the most historically and contemporarily diverse areas, which suggests that they should be the first priority for protected area (PA) designation. The central and coastal areas should be secondarily prioritized. In these 2 regions, conservation should focus on human coexistence with nature. Less attention should be paid to the PA in the northeast and western northwest because in these areas ecosystems are depauperate and the climate is harsh. Conservation in these areas should focus principally on avoiding further human encroachment on natural areas. Article impact statement: Historical and contemporary patterns of extinction can be a basis for mammalian conservation strategies. |
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Keywords: | biodiversity conservation strategies human-induced impacts mammalian extinction terrestrial animal animal terrestre biodiversidad estrategias de conservación extinción de mamíferos impactos inducidos por los humanos 陆生哺乳动物 生物多样性 哺乳动物的灭绝 人为影响 保护策略 |
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