Human carnivory as a major driver of vertebrate extinction
Autor: | Luiz Gomes-Jr, Fernando A. S. Fernandez, Zulmira H. Coimbra |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
Livestock lcsh:QH1-199.5 media_common.quotation_subject Biodiversity Climate change Predation Management Monitoring Policy and Law lcsh:General. Including nature conservation geographical distribution 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences Competition (biology) Trophic ecology Human ecology lcsh:QH540-549.5 IUCN Red List Nature and Landscape Conservation Trophic level media_common Ecology business.industry 010604 marine biology & hydrobiology Biodiversity crisis Geography Bycatch Threatened species lcsh:Ecology business |
Zdroj: | Perspectives in Ecology and Conservation, Vol 18, Iss 4, Pp 283-293 (2020) |
ISSN: | 2530-0644 |
Popis: | Although a considerable part of the anthropogenic impacts on other species has been caused by our habit of eating other animals, little attention has been given to understanding and quantifying how human carnivory threatens biodiversity globally. Herein we review the anthropogenic threats to 1000 species randomly selected among more than 46,000 vertebrate entries in the IUCN Red List database. We identified the following mechanisms by which human carnivory (i.e., our habit of feeding on other animals and related products) negatively affects the world's vertebrates: two mechanisms related to predation (predation and bycatch), two to competition (prey depletion and persecution), one to biohazards (any negative impacts caused by livestock or alien species whose introduction is linked to human carnivory), four to environmental changes (destructive harvesting practices, livestock, agriculture, and climate change), and a miscellaneous category for processes more indirectly connected with our high trophic position. Our conservative estimate, which does not include livestock impacts via agriculture and climate change, reveals that about one-quarter of the world's vertebrates are threatened by at least one mechanism related to human carnivory, and that this proportion is higher than that attributable to other leading causes of biodiversity decline including agriculture, forestry, infrastructure, pollution, invasive species, energy production and mining, fire regime and water systems modifications, and climate change. Our results suggest that human carnivory is the major driver of the current biodiversity crisis, and we hope our findings may contribute to raise awareness about this fundamental yet overlooked aspect of human ecology. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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