Drivers of habitat availability for terrestrial mammals : unravelling the role of livestock, land conversion and intrinsic traits in the past 50 years
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Date
Authors
Pacifici, Michela
Christiano, Andrea
Lumbierres, Maria
Lucherini, Mauro
Mallon, David
Meijaard, Erik
Solari, Sergio
Tognelli, Marcelo F.
Belant, Jerrold L.
Butynski, Thomas M.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Abstract
The global decline of terrestrial species is largely due to the degradation, loss and
fragmentation of their habitats. The conversion of natural ecosystems for cropland,
rangeland, forest products and human infrastructure are the primary causes of habitat
deterioration. Due to the paucity of data on the past distribution of species and the
scarcity of fine-scale habitat conversion maps, however, accurate assessment of the
recent effects of habitat degradation, loss and fragmentation on the range of mammals
has been near impossible. We aim to assess the proportions of available habitat
within the lost and retained parts of mammals' distribution ranges, and to identify
the drivers of habitat availability. We produced distribution maps for 475 terrestrial
mammals for the range they occupied 50 years ago and compared them to current
range maps. We then calculated the differences in the percentage of ‘area of habitat’
(habitat available to a species within its range) between the lost and retained range
areas. Finally, we ran generalized linear mixed models to identify which variables were
more influential in determining habitat availability in the lost and retained parts of the
distribution ranges. We found that 59% of species had a lower proportion of available
habitat in the lost range compared to the retained range, thus hypothesizing that habitat loss could have contributed to range declines. The most important factors
negatively affecting habitat availability were the conversion of land to rangeland and
high density of livestock. Significant intrinsic traits were those related to reproductive
timing and output, habitat breadth and medium body size. Our findings emphasize the
importance of implementing conservation strategies to mitigate the impacts caused
by human activities on the habitats of mammals, and offer evidence indicating which
species have the potential to reoccupy portions of their former range if other threats
cease to occur.
Description
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
The data that support the findings of this study are openly available
in Zenodo at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo. 8362601, reference
number 8362601.
Keywords
Area of habitat, Cropland Habitat loss, Livestock, Mammals, Pasture, Range change, SDG-15: Life on land
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-15:Life on land
Citation
Pacifici, M., Cristiano, A.,
Lumbierres, M., Lucherini, M., Mallon, D., Meijaard, E., Solari,
S., Tognelli, M. F., Belant, J. L., Butynski, T. M., Cronin, D.,
d’Huart, J.-P., Da Re, D., de Jong, Y. A., Dheer, A., Fei, Li,
Gallina, S., Goodrich, J. M., Harihar, A. … Wiesel, I. (2023).
Drivers of habitat availability for terrestrial mammals:
Unravelling the role of livestock, land conversion and
intrinsic traits in the past 50 years. Global Change Biology, 29,
6900–6911. https://DOI.org/10.1111/gcb.16964.
