Biological determinants of extinction risk: why are smaller species less vulnerable?
Open Access
- 28 February 2003
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Animal Conservation
- Vol. 6 (1) , 63-69
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s1367943003003093
Abstract
It is becoming increasingly clear that species of smaller body size tend to be less vulnerable to contemporary extinction threats than larger species, but few studies have examined the mechanisms underlying this pattern. In this paper, data for the Australian terrestrial mammal fauna are used to ask whether higher reproductive output or smaller home ranges can explain the reduced extinction risk of smaller species. Extinct and endangered species do indeed have smaller litters and larger home ranges for their body size than expected under a null model. In multiple regressions, however, only litter size is a significant predictor of extinction risk once body size and phylogeny are controlled for. Larger litters contribute to fast population growth, and are probably part of the reason that smaller species are less extinction‐prone. The effect of litter size varies between the mesic coastal regions and the arid interior of Australia, indicating that the environment a species inhabits mediates the effect of biology on extinction risk. These results suggest that predicting extinction risk from biological traits is likely to be a complex task which must consider explicitly interactions between biology and environment.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Body Size and Risk of Extinction in Australian MammalsConservation Biology, 2001
- Systematic Relationships within the Dasyurid Marsupial Tribe Sminthopsini—A Multigene ApproachMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 1999
- Present and Future Taxonomic Selectivity in Bird and Mammal ExtinctionsConservation Biology, 1998
- Life history correlates of responses to fisheries exploitationProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1998
- Evolutionary age and risk of extinction in the global avifaunaEvolutionary Ecology, 1997
- DNA phylogeny of the marsupial wolf resolvedProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1997
- Patterns and causes of extinction and decline in Australian conilurine rodentsBiological Conservation, 1996
- Mammal Decline and Recovery in AustraliaJournal of Mammalogy, 1994
- Phylogeny of the Australian Rodents (Muridae) - a Molecular Approach Using Microcomplement Fixation of AlbuminAustralian Journal of Zoology, 1992
- Ecological Correlates of Extinction Proneness in Australian Tropical Rain Forest MammalsConservation Biology, 1991