| Literature DB >> 25186001 |
Tatsuya Amano1, Brody Sandel2, Heidi Eager3, Edouard Bulteau4, Jens-Christian Svenning2, Bo Dalsgaard5, Carsten Rahbek5, Richard G Davies6, William J Sutherland7.
Abstract
Many of the world's languages face serious risk of extinction. Efforts to prevent this cultural loss are severely constrained by a poor understanding of the geographical patterns and drivers of extinction risk. We quantify the global distribution of language extinction risk-represented by small range and speaker population sizes and rapid declines in the number of speakers-and identify the underlying environmental and socioeconomic drivers. We show that both small range and speaker population sizes are associated with rapid declines in speaker numbers, causing 25% of existing languages to be threatened based on criteria used for species. Language range and population sizes are small in tropical and arctic regions, particularly in areas with high rainfall, high topographic heterogeneity and/or rapidly growing human populations. By contrast, recent speaker declines have mainly occurred at high latitudes and are strongly linked to high economic growth. Threatened languages are numerous in the tropics, the Himalayas and northwestern North America. These results indicate that small-population languages remaining in economically developed regions are seriously threatened by continued speaker declines. However, risks of future language losses are especially high in the tropics and in the Himalayas, as these regions harbour many small-population languages and are undergoing rapid economic growth.Entities:
Keywords: cultural conservation; cultural diversity; endangered languages; human ecology; language conservation; macroecology
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25186001 PMCID: PMC4173687 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2014.1574
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349
Figure 1.Histograms of (a) language range size (km2, n = 6359), (b) language population size (n = 6569), (c) speaker growth rate (n = 649) and (d–f) their pairwise relationships. The black vertical line in (c) and horizontal lines in (e) and (f) indicate the mean human population growth rate between 1980 and 2000, and red bars (shown with arrows) in (c) and orange circles in (e) and (f) show languages that have become extinct after 1949. Red lines in (d)–(f) show the fitted segmented regression, and vertical solid and dashed lines are the estimated thresholds and their 95% confidence intervals, respectively (see Material and methods and electronic supplementary material, table S4 for more detail).
Figure 2.Global maps of extinction-risk components for languages and the important underlying drivers. The maps show median (a) language range size (km2), (b) language population size and (c) speaker growth rate. Medians were calculated for log10-transformed range size and population size and for speaker growth rate. The plots show the individual effects of (d) annual precipitation on language range size, (e) annual precipitation on language population size and (f) GDP per capita on speaker growth rate, after effects of other variables and spatial autocorrelation have been partialled out. Variables shown here are one of the most important variables in each of the best SAR error models (i.e. those with the smallest AIC); lines represent regression lines based on coefficients estimated in the best models. Other important variables are shown in the electronic supplementary material, figures S8–10.
Model-averaged results based on SAR error models for the effect of environmental and socioeconomic factors on language range size, population size and speaker growth rate. Language richness was not included in the models for range size and population size (see Material and methods for more detail). Coefficients, their SEs and z-values show weighted-average values across 95% sets of SAR error models with different parameter combinations by Akaike weights (w). Σ w for each variable shows the sum of w of models including the variable, reflecting the relative importance of each variable. Results with z-values > 2.0 are shown in bold. Nagelkerke pseudo-R for the full model was 0.60, 0.50 and 0.73 for range size, population size and speaker growth rate, respectively.
| explanatory variables | geographical range size | population size | speaker growth rate | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| coefficient | s.e. | Σ | coefficient | s.e. | Σ | coefficient | s.e. | Σ | ||||
| environmental factors | ||||||||||||
| annual precipitation | − | − | 2.16 × 10−6 | 2.26 × 10−6 | 0.96 | 0.38 | ||||||
| vegetation productivity | −2.83 × 10−3 | 2.92 × 10−3 | 0.97 | 0.37 | 5.88 × 10−5 | 6.63 × 10−5 | 0.89 | 0.35 | ||||
| temperature seasonality | 1.22 × 10−5 | 1.69 × 10−5 | 0.72 | 0.32 | −1.18 × 10−5 | 2.09 × 10−5 | 0.56 | 0.29 | ||||
| precipitation seasonality | 0.47 × 10−3 | 1.21 × 10−3 | 0.39 | 0.28 | −2.65 × 10−3 | 1.90 × 10−3 | 1.40 | 0.49 | 2.84 × 10−5 | 5.28 × 10−5 | 0.54 | 0.29 |
| elevation range | 4.50 × 10−7 | 8.64 × 10−7 | 0.52 | 0.29 | ||||||||
| habitat diversity | − | −0.11 | 0.09 | 1.26 | 0.46 | −1.21 × 10−3 | 1.84 × 10−3 | 0.66 | 0.30 | |||
| socioeconomic factors | ||||||||||||
| mean population density | 0.93 × 10−2 | 2.88 × 10−2 | 0.32 | 0.27 | −0.66 × 10−4 | 1.10 × 10−3 | 0.60 | 0.30 | ||||
| population change | − | 1.07 × 10−3 | 2.43 × 10−3 | 0.44 | 0.29 | |||||||
| GDP per capita | 0.03 | 0.12 | 0.253 | 0.27 | ||||||||
| language richness | −3.03 × 10−3 | 2.64 × 10−3 | 1.15 | 0.25 | ||||||||
Figure 3.Global maps of (a) threatened language richness based on the IUCN criteria, (b) extinct language richness and (c) relationships between the proportion of threatened to total extant language richness and the proportion of extinct to total extant language richness. Note that the number of extinct languages in each cell is based on the location of the last known population of speakers of extinct languages. In (c), blue areas, which have disproportionately large numbers of threatened languages and have experienced few extinction events, are of particular conservation concern.