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A GIS-Based Comparison of the Mexican National and IUCN Methods for Determining Extinction Risk
Authors:TERESA P FERIA ARROYO†  MARK E OLSON‡  ABISAÍ GARCÍA-MENDOZA‡§  ELOY SOLANO†
Institution:Laboratory of Landscape Ecology, Department of Biology, University of Texas—Pan American, 1201 W. University Drive, Edinburg, TX 78541, U.S.A., email;Unidad de Investigación en Sistemática Vegetal y Suelo, Herbario FEZA, Facultad de Estudios Superiores Zaragoza, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, A.P. 9-020, Mexico;Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Departamento de Botánica, Tercer Circuito s/n, Ciudad Universitaria, Copilco, Coyoacán A.P. 70-367, C.P. 04510, Mexico;Instituto de Biología, Jardín Botánico A.P. 70-614 Del. Coyoacán 04510, Mexico
Abstract:Abstract:  The national systems used in the evaluation of extinction risk are often touted as more readily applied and somehow more regionally appropriate than the system of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). We compared risk assessments of the Mexican national system (method for evaluation of risk of extinction of wild species MER]) with the IUCN system for the 16 Polianthes taxa (Agavaceae), a genus of plants with marked variation in distribution sizes. We used a novel combination of herbarium data, geographic information systems (GIS), and species distribution models to provide rapid, repeatable estimates of extinction risk. Our GIS method showed that the MER and the IUCN system use similar data. Our comparison illustrates how the IUCN method can be applied even when all desirable data are not available, and that the MER offers no special regional advantage with respect to the IUCN regional system. Instead, our results coincided, with both systems identifying 14 taxa of conservation concern and the remaining two taxa of low risk, largely because both systems use similar information. An obstacle for the application of the MER is that there are no standards for quantifying the criteria of habitat condition and intrinsic biological vulnerability. If these impossible-to-quantify criteria are left out, what are left are geographical distribution and the impact of human activity, essentially the considerations we were able to assess for the IUCN method. Our method has the advantage of making the IUCN criteria easy to apply, and because each step can be standardized between studies, it ensures greater comparability of extinction risk estimates among taxa.
Keywords:Agavaceae  estimation of distribution area  extinction risk assessment  IUCN  MER              Polianthes
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