Vulnerability of Cerrado threatened mammals

dc.citationDe Marco, P., Jr, Villén, S., Mendes, P., Nóbrega, C., Cortes, L., Castro, T., & Souza, R. (2020). Vulnerability of Cerrado threatened mammals: an integrative landscape and climate modeling approach. Biodiversity and Conservation, 29(5), 1637–1658. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-018-1615-xpt_BR
dc.contributor.authorMarco Jr, Paulo De
dc.contributor.authorVillén, Sara
dc.contributor.authorMendes, Poliana
dc.contributor.authorNóbrega, Caroline
dc.contributor.authorCortes, Lara
dc.contributor.authorCastro, Tiago
dc.contributor.authorSouza, Rodrigo
dc.date.accessed2024-08-06
dc.date.accessioned2025-07-04T12:18:39Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.description.abstractSpecies vulnerability is defined based on their exposition, sensitivity and adaptive capacity to a given impact. Considering limitations to estimate the sensitivity component, we developed a framework integrating the knowledge on ecological niche models and extinction thresholds, generating species sensitivity scenarios at the landscape scale. Our aim was to assess species and landscape vulnerability for threatened mammal species from the Brazilian Cerrado by considering seven types of human-impacts and climatic suitability. We assumed that climatic-suitable landscapes with less than 50% of remaining natural vegetation are not suitable for species, while in landscapes with 50–60% of remaining natural vegetation, populations are highly vulnerable. We found a spatial match between climatic-suitable areas and highly-impacted landscape (< 50% of remaining vegetation), specifically in southern Cerrado. We attribute this result to two main reasons: (1) similar characteristics affecting both suitability for species and human activities; and (2) highly impacted landscapes are likely to shelter threatened species. Vulnerable cells, with 50–60% of remaining vegetation, were distributed throughout Cerrado, meaning that there is no spatial bias within their distribution. Range-restricted species exhibited higher variability in vulnerability compared to widely-distributed species, what could be explained by human occupation being spatially clumped. Agriculture is the major impact affecting highly-impacted landscapes (< 50% of remaining vegetation), transport infra-structure has higher impact on vulnerable landscapes. We believe that our approach can be easily applied for assessing species and landscape vulnerability in many ecological domains by adapting extinction thresholds according to the focus taxon.pt_BR
dc.event.uf(outra)pt_BR
dc.finalpage1658pt_BR
dc.identifier.otherhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-018-1615-xpt_BR
dc.identifier.urihttps://bdc.icmbio.gov.br/handle/cecav/2322
dc.initialpage1637pt_BR
dc.language.isoenpt_BR
dc.localofdeposithttps://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10531-018-1615-xpt_BR
dc.publisherBiodiversity and Conservationpt_BR
dc.subjects Species vulnerabilitypt_BR
dc.subject· Habitat losspt_BR
dc.subjectExtinction threshold theorypt_BR
dc.subject· Threatened speciespt_BR
dc.subject· Land use changespt_BR
dc.subtitlean integrative landscape and climate modeling approach.pt_BR
dc.titleVulnerability of Cerrado threatened mammalspt_BR
dc.typeArtigopt_BR
dc.volume29pt_BR

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