Climate change is amongst the main threats to biodiversity. Considering extant mammals endured Quaternary climate change, we analyzed the extent to which this past change predicts current mammals' extinction risk at global and biogeographical scales. We accessed range dynamics by modeling the potential distribution of all extant terrestrial mammals in the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, 21,000 years ago) and in current climate conditions and used extinction risk from IUCN red list. We built General Linear Mixed-Effects Models to test the magnitude with which the variation in geographic range (ΔRange) and a proxy for abundance (ΔSuitability) between the LGM and present-day predicts current mammal's extinction risk. We found past climate change mo...
Approximately 25% of mammals are currently threatened with extinction, a risk that is amplified unde...
Model predictions of extinction risks from anthropogenic climate change are dire, but still overly s...
Controversy persists about why so many large-bodied mammal species went extinct around the end of th...
Global climate change is predicted to result in the decline and/or extinction of a large number of a...
Climate change alters species distributions, causing plants and animals to move north or to higher e...
Funder: European Research Council Consolidator GrantAbstract: Species’ vulnerability to extinction i...
Identifying which species are at greatest risk, what makes them vulnerable, and where they are distr...
Comparative studies of extinction risk in vertebrate taxa often find that a small geographic range s...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
Human land-use results in widespread range change across taxa. Anthropogenic pressures can result in...
Aim The risk climate change poses to biodiversity is often estimated by forecasting the areas tha...
Earth has experienced five major extinction events in the past 450 million years. Many scientists su...
Successful conservation depends on a solid understanding of how climate change and biological intera...
Earth has experienced five major extinction events in the past 450 million years. Many scientists su...
Species extinction is the most alarming consequence of global biodiversity decline, with potential d...
Approximately 25% of mammals are currently threatened with extinction, a risk that is amplified unde...
Model predictions of extinction risks from anthropogenic climate change are dire, but still overly s...
Controversy persists about why so many large-bodied mammal species went extinct around the end of th...
Global climate change is predicted to result in the decline and/or extinction of a large number of a...
Climate change alters species distributions, causing plants and animals to move north or to higher e...
Funder: European Research Council Consolidator GrantAbstract: Species’ vulnerability to extinction i...
Identifying which species are at greatest risk, what makes them vulnerable, and where they are distr...
Comparative studies of extinction risk in vertebrate taxa often find that a small geographic range s...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
Human land-use results in widespread range change across taxa. Anthropogenic pressures can result in...
Aim The risk climate change poses to biodiversity is often estimated by forecasting the areas tha...
Earth has experienced five major extinction events in the past 450 million years. Many scientists su...
Successful conservation depends on a solid understanding of how climate change and biological intera...
Earth has experienced five major extinction events in the past 450 million years. Many scientists su...
Species extinction is the most alarming consequence of global biodiversity decline, with potential d...
Approximately 25% of mammals are currently threatened with extinction, a risk that is amplified unde...
Model predictions of extinction risks from anthropogenic climate change are dire, but still overly s...
Controversy persists about why so many large-bodied mammal species went extinct around the end of th...