| Literature DB >> 22952807 |
Nick J B Isaac1, David W Redding, Helen M Meredith, Kamran Safi.
Abstract
The amphibian decline and extinction crisis demands urgent action to prevent further large numbers of species extinctions. Lists of priority species for conservation, based on a combination of species' threat status and unique contribution to phylogenetic diversity, are one tool for the direction and catalyzation of conservation action. We describe the construction of a near-complete species-level phylogeny of 5713 amphibian species, which we use to create a list of evolutionarily distinct and globally endangered species (EDGE list) for the entire class Amphibia. We present sensitivity analyses to test the robustness of our priority list to uncertainty in species' phylogenetic position and threat status. We find that both sources of uncertainty have only minor impacts on our 'top 100' list of priority species, indicating the robustness of the approach. By contrast, our analyses suggest that a large number of Data Deficient species are likely to be high priorities for conservation action from the perspective of their contribution to the evolutionary history.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22952807 PMCID: PMC3431382 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0043912
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 3Results from simulations to explore the impact of uncertainty on the makeup of 100 highest ranked EDGE amphibian species.
In each case, ‘similarity’ is the proportion of species shared with the unperturbed reference set, based on 1000 simulated datasets. Confidence intervals are drawn in grey but lie too close to the mean to be visible. Panel a) shows the impact of perturbing the evolutionary distinctiveness component (ED) by moving 500 (10%) randomly-selected species to closely related clades. Panel b) shows a similar relationship when 500 species have their threat categories perturbed. Panel c) shows the effect of different assumptions about true threat categories of Data Deficient (DD) species: with ‘DD category = 0′, DD species were assigned randomly, according to the distribution of non-DD species; with DD category >0 we assume that DD species are on average more threatened than expected. Panel d) shows the impact of multiple perturbations, with increasing the numbers of species perturbed. See text for further details.
Figure 1Species level phylogeny of 4339 amphibian species, colour-coded by species’ EDGE scores. Data Deficient and Extinct species have been omitted.
The 47 candidate amphibian species with high ED scores and “Data Deficient” IUCN assessment staus.
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| 1 | Rhinatrematidae |
| 81.3908 |
| 2 | Rhinatrematidae |
| 81.3908 |
| 3 | Rhinatrematidae |
| 81.3908 |
| 4 | Rhinatrematidae |
| 81.3908 |
| 5 | Rhinatrematidae |
| 81.3908 |
| 6 | Caeciliidae |
| 73.1665 |
| 7 | Caeciliidae |
| 63.6999 |
| 8 | Caeciliidae |
| 59.3842 |
| 9 | Caeciliidae |
| 59.3842 |
| 10 | Caeciliidae |
| 56.8488 |
| 11 | Caeciliidae |
| 56.8488 |
| 12 | Caeciliidae |
| 56.8488 |
| 13 | Pipidae |
| 52.5783 |
| 14 | Pipidae |
| 52.5783 |
| 15 | Myobatrachidae |
| 50.1187 |
| 16 | Caeciliidae |
| 50.0494 |
| 17 | Caeciliidae |
| 50.0494 |
| 18 | Caeciliidae |
| 50.0494 |
| 19 | Caeciliidae |
| 50.0494 |
| 20 | Caeciliidae |
| 50.0494 |
| 21 | Caeciliidae |
| 49.7193 |
| 22 | Caeciliidae |
| 49.7193 |
| 23 | Caeciliidae |
| 45.7398 |
| 24 | Caeciliidae |
| 45.7398 |
| 25 | Caeciliidae |
| 45.7398 |
| 26 | Caeciliidae |
| 45.7398 |
| 27 | Caeciliidae |
| 45.7398 |
| 28 | Caeciliidae |
| 45.7398 |
| 29 | Caeciliidae |
| 45.7398 |
| 30 | Ambystomatidae |
| 42.3185 |
| 31 | Ambystomatidae |
| 42.3185 |
| 32 | Ambystomatidae |
| 42.3185 |
| 33 | Hynobiidae |
| 42.1579 |
| 34 | Caeciliidae |
| 41.7074 |
| 35 | Caeciliidae |
| 41.7074 |
| 36 | Caeciliidae |
| 37.1099 |
| 37 | Caeciliidae |
| 37.1099 |
| 38 | Caeciliidae |
| 37.1099 |
| 39 | Caeciliidae |
| 35.9600 |
| 40 | Ichthyophiidae |
| 35.3800 |
| 41 | Ichthyophiidae |
| 35.3800 |
| 42 | Ichthyophiidae |
| 35.3800 |
| 43 | Ichthyophiidae |
| 35.3800 |
| 44 | Ichthyophiidae |
| 35.3800 |
| 45 | Mantellidae |
| 34.9872 |
| 46 | Microhylidae |
| 30.5161 |
| 47 | Limnodynastidae |
| 29.3150 |
Figure 2The mean ED scores of the top 100 species chosen using five different methods to create EDGE lists.
Thick black lines indicate upper and low limits where species are chosen purely by having the highest ED score irrespective of threat (upper line) and just the most threatened (lower line) species are chosen. Lines represents the mean ED of the top 1:n top ranked species by each EDGE listing process. Note logarithmic y-axis.