| Literature DB >> 29787717 |
Samuel T Turvey1, Shu Chen2, Benjamin Tapley2, Gang Wei3, Feng Xie4, Fang Yan5, Jian Yang6, Zhiqiang Liang7, Haifeng Tian8, Minyao Wu9, Sumio Okada10, Jie Wang4, Jingcai Lü3, Feng Zhou9, Sarah K Papworth11, Jay Redbond12, Thomas Brown2, Jing Che5, Andrew A Cunningham13.
Abstract
Species with large geographic ranges are considered resilient to global decline [1]. However, human pressures on biodiversity affect increasingly large areas, in particular across Asia, where market forces drive overexploitation of species [2]. Range-wide threat assessments are often costly and thus extrapolated from non-representative local studies [3]. The Chinese giant salamander (Andrias davidianus), the world's largest amphibian, is thought to occur across much of China, but populations are harvested for farming as luxury food [4]. Between 2013 and 2016, we conducted field surveys and 2,872 interviews in possibly the largest wildlife survey conducted in China. This extensive effort revealed that populations of this once-widespread species are now critically depleted or extirpated across all surveyed areas of their range, and illegal poaching is widespread.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29787717 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2018.04.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Biol ISSN: 0960-9822 Impact factor: 10.834