AI Article Synopsis

  • Human-driven extinction poses a significant risk to jawed vertebrates, potentially leading to a loss of 86-150 billion years of evolutionary history in the next few centuries.
  • The study ranks species using EDGE scores to prioritize conservation efforts, with chondrichthyans, ray-finned fish, and testudines being the most at risk.
  • Families of jawed vertebrates with only one species (monotypic families) are more threatened and declining compared to other groups, emphasizing the need for targeted conservation actions.

Article Abstract

Human-driven extinction threatens entire lineages across the Tree of Life. Here we assess the conservation status of jawed vertebrate evolutionary history, using three policy-relevant approaches. First, we calculate an index of threat to overall evolutionary history, showing that we expect to lose 86-150 billion years (11-19%) of jawed vertebrate evolutionary history over the next 50-500 years. Second, we rank jawed vertebrate species by their EDGE scores to identify the highest priorities for species-focused conservation of evolutionary history, finding that chondrichthyans, ray-finned fish and testudines rank highest of all jawed vertebrates. Third, we assess the conservation status of jawed vertebrate families. We found that species within monotypic families are more likely to be threatened and more likely to be in decline than other species. We provide a baseline for the status of families at risk of extinction to catalyse conservation action. This work continues a trend of highlighting neglected groups-such as testudines, crocodylians, amphibians and chondrichthyans-as conservation priorities from a phylogenetic perspective.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10904806PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45119-zDOI Listing

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