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The global distribution of tetrapods reveals a need for targeted reptile conservation

The global distribution of tetrapods reveals a need for targeted reptile conservation

Authors :
Anat Feldman
Matthew LeBreton
Yuezhao Wang
Guarino R. Colli
Enav Vidan
Omar Torres-Carvajal
Marcio Martins
Monika Böhm
Roberto Sindaco
Danny Meirte
Lital Dabool
Amir Lewin
C. David L. Orme
Philipp Wagner
Fred Kraus
Uri Roll
Marinus S. Hoogmoed
Aaron M. Bauer
Yuval Itescu
Peter Uetz
Ben Collen
Erez Maza
Allen Allison
L. Lee Grismer
Richard Grenyer
Tiffany M. Doan
Maria Novosolov
Daniel Pincheira-Donoso
Fernando Castro-Herrera
Rodolphe Bernard
Jean-François Trape
Zoltán T. Nagy
Olivier S. G. Pauwels
Laurent Chirio
Gary D. Powney
Cristiano Nogueira
Shai Meiri
Oliver J.S. Tallowin
Indraneil Das
Source :
Nature Ecology & Evolution. 1:1677-1682
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.

Abstract

The distributions of amphibians, birds and mammals have underpinned global and local conservation priorities, and have been fundamental to our understanding of the determinants of global biodiversity. In contrast, the global distributions of reptiles, representing a third of terrestrial vertebrate diversity, have been unavailable. This prevented the incorporation of reptiles into conservation planning and biased our understanding of the underlying processes governing global vertebrate biodiversity. Here, we present and analyse the global distribution of 10,064 reptile species (99% of extant terrestrial species). We show that richness patterns of the other three tetrapod classes are good spatial surrogates for species richness of all reptiles combined and of snakes, but characterize diversity patterns of lizards and turtles poorly. Hotspots of total and endemic lizard richness overlap very little with those of other taxa. Moreover, existing protected areas, sites of biodiversity significance and global conservation schemes represent birds and mammals better than reptiles. We show that additional conservation actions are needed to effectively protect reptiles, particularly lizards and turtles. Adding reptile knowledge to a global complementarity conservation priority scheme identifies many locations that consequently become important. Notably, investing resources in some of the world’s arid, grassland and savannah habitats might be necessary to represent all terrestrial vertebrates efficiently.

Details

ISSN :
2397334X
Volume :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Ecology & Evolution
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d080d78a225dbe04110615b9316d23b7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-017-0332-2