You-Hua CHEN. 2014. Ecological predictors of extinction risks of endemic mammals of China. Zoological Research, 35(4): 346-349. DOI: 10.13918/j.issn.2095-8137.2014.4.346
Citation: You-Hua CHEN. 2014. Ecological predictors of extinction risks of endemic mammals of China. Zoological Research, 35(4): 346-349. DOI: 10.13918/j.issn.2095-8137.2014.4.346

Ecological predictors of extinction risks of endemic mammals of China

  • In this brief report, we analyzed ecological correlates of risk of extinction for mammals endemic to China using phylogenetic eigenvector methods to control for the effect of phylogenetic inertia. Extinction risks were based on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List and ecological explanatory attributes that include range size and climatic variables. When the effect of phylogenetic inertia were controlled, climate became the best predictor for quantifying and evaluating extinction risks of endemic mammals in China, accounting for 13% of the total variation. Range size seems to play a trivial role, explaining ~1% of total variation; however, when non-phylogenetic variation partitioning analysis was done, the role of range size then explained 7.4% of total variation. Consequently, phylogenetic inertia plays a substantial role in increasing the explanatory power of range size on the extinction risks of mammals endemic to China. Limitations of the present study are discussed, with a focus on under-represented sampling of endemic mammalian species.
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