Estimates of species extinctions from species-area relationships strongly depend on ecological context

Miguel G. Matias, Dominique Gravel, François Guilhaumon, Philippe Desjardins-Proulx, Michel Loreau, Tamara Münkemüller, Nicolas Mouquet
2013 Ecography  
Species-area (SAR) and endemics-area (EAR) relationships are amongst the most common methods used to forecast species loss resulting from habitat loss. One critical, albeit often ignored, limitation of these area-based estimates is their disregard of the ecological context that shapes species distributions. In this study, we estimate species loss using a spatially explicit mechanistic simulation model to evaluate three important aspects of ecological context: coexistence mechanisms (e.g.
more » ... sorting, competition-colonization tradeoffs and neutral dynamics), spatial distribution of environmental conditions, and spatial pattern of habitat loss. We found that 1) area-based estimates of extinctions are sensitive to coexistence mechanisms as well as to the pattern of environmental heterogeneity; 2) there is a strong interaction between coexistence mechanisms and the pattern of habitat loss; 3) SARs always yield higher estimates of species loss than do EARs; and 4) SARs and EARs consistently underestimate the realized species loss. Our results highlight the need to integrate ecological mechanisms in area-estimates of species loss.
doi:10.1111/j.1600-0587.2013.00448.x fatcat:2qb4k32h2jb7nkdvcit3ivx4xq