An article published in the journal Nature in January 2004-in which an international team of biologists predicted that climate change would, by 2050, doom 15-37% of the earth's species to extinction-attracted unprecedented, worldwide media attention. The predictions conflict with the conventional wisdom that habitat change and modification are the most important causes of current and future extinctions. The new extinction projections come from applying a well-known ecological pattern, the species-area relationship (SAR), to data on the current distributions and climatic requirements of 1103 species. Here, I examine the scientific basis to the claims made in the Nature article. I first highlight the potential and pitfalls of using the SAR to...
Conservation is plagued by the issue of prioritization - what to conserve and where to conserve it -...
The destruction of natural habitats is causing loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services. Although...
<p>Current extinction rates are thought to be significantly higher than at any point in the last 65 ...
Current climate change may be a major threat to global biodiversity, but the extent of species loss ...
Habitat change, invasive species, over-exploitation, pollution and climate change drive biodiversity...
Climate change and habitat destruction are two of the greatest threats to global biodiversity. Latti...
Current climate change may be a major threat to global biodiversity, but the extent of species loss ...
Climate change over the past ~30 years has produced numerous shifts in the distributions and abundan...
CLIMATE CHANGE is predicted to result in a worldwide loss of biodiversity, with extinctions becoming...
There is a widespread belief that we are experiencing a mass extinction event similar in severity t...
Abstract There is a widespread belief that we are experiencing a mass extinction event similar in se...
Climate change poses an enormous risk to plant and animal species across the planet. Mean global tem...
Published online 26 February 2014There is an urgent need to develop effective vulnerability assessme...
Anthropogenic climate change is predicted to be a major cause of species extinctions in the next 100...
Climate change and habitat loss are both key threatening processes driving the global loss in biodiv...
Conservation is plagued by the issue of prioritization - what to conserve and where to conserve it -...
The destruction of natural habitats is causing loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services. Although...
<p>Current extinction rates are thought to be significantly higher than at any point in the last 65 ...
Current climate change may be a major threat to global biodiversity, but the extent of species loss ...
Habitat change, invasive species, over-exploitation, pollution and climate change drive biodiversity...
Climate change and habitat destruction are two of the greatest threats to global biodiversity. Latti...
Current climate change may be a major threat to global biodiversity, but the extent of species loss ...
Climate change over the past ~30 years has produced numerous shifts in the distributions and abundan...
CLIMATE CHANGE is predicted to result in a worldwide loss of biodiversity, with extinctions becoming...
There is a widespread belief that we are experiencing a mass extinction event similar in severity t...
Abstract There is a widespread belief that we are experiencing a mass extinction event similar in se...
Climate change poses an enormous risk to plant and animal species across the planet. Mean global tem...
Published online 26 February 2014There is an urgent need to develop effective vulnerability assessme...
Anthropogenic climate change is predicted to be a major cause of species extinctions in the next 100...
Climate change and habitat loss are both key threatening processes driving the global loss in biodiv...
Conservation is plagued by the issue of prioritization - what to conserve and where to conserve it -...
The destruction of natural habitats is causing loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services. Although...
<p>Current extinction rates are thought to be significantly higher than at any point in the last 65 ...