Authors
Samuel B Fey, Adam M Siepielski, Sébastien Nusslé, Kristina Cervantes-Yoshida, Jason L Hwan, Eric R Huber, Maxfield J Fey, Alessandro Catenazzi, Stephanie M Carlson
Publication date
2015/1/27
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
112
Issue
4
Pages
1083-1088
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Mass mortality events (MMEs) are rapidly occurring catastrophic demographic events that punctuate background mortality levels. Individual MMEs are staggering in their observed magnitude: removing more than 90% of a population, resulting in the death of more than a billion individuals, or producing 700 million tons of dead biomass in a single event. Despite extensive documentation of individual MMEs, we have no understanding of the major features characterizing the occurrence and magnitude of MMEs, their causes, or trends through time. Thus, no framework exists for contextualizing MMEs in the wake of ongoing global and regional perturbations to natural systems. Here we present an analysis of 727 published MMEs from across the globe, affecting 2,407 animal populations. We show that the magnitude of MMEs has been intensifying for birds, fishes, and marine invertebrates; invariant for mammals; and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
SB Fey, AM Siepielski, S Nusslé, K Cervantes-Yoshida… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2015