Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4381191 Acta Oecologica 2012 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

The species-area relationship (SAR), i.e. the increase in species number with area, has been repeatedly used to predict species extinction, at both local and global scales, with habitat reduction. He and Hubbell (Nature, 2011; 473, 368–371), however, argued that the function that relates species loss with decreasing habitat area cannot be simply obtained reversing the species-area accumulation curve. Using a statistically more appropriate curve based on endemics (EAR), they concluded that the SAR overestimates species extinction. Although we agree that SARs and EARs have different shapes, this does not imply that SARs overestimate species extinction. Empirical evidence suggests that SARs do not overestimate, but underestimate species extinction by habitat loss and fragmentation. We discuss various examples taken from recent literature to show that SARs underestimate species extinction.

► The species-area relationship (SAR) is widely used to predict species extinction. ► He and Hubbell argue that the SAR overestimates species extinction. ► We used data taken from recent literature on species extinction at different scales. ► We compared documented extinctions with species extinctions predicted from SARs. ► Empirical evidence suggests that SARs underestimate species extinction.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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