Authors
CH Sekercioğlu, Gretchen C Daily, Paul R Ehrlich
Publication date
2004/12
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume
101
Issue
52
Pages
18042
Description
We present a general framework for characterizing the ecological and societal consequences of biodiversity loss and applying it to the global avifauna. To investigate the potential ecological consequences of avian declines, we developed comprehensive databases of the status and functional roles of birds and a stochastic model for forecasting change. Overall, 21% of bird species are currently extinction-prone and 6.5% are functionally extinct, contributing negligibly to ecosystem processes. We show that a quarter or more of frugivorous and omnivorous species and one-third or more of herbivorous, piscivorous, and scavenger species are extinction-prone. Furthermore, our projections indicate that by 2100, 6–14% of all bird species will be extinct, and 7–25% (28–56% on oceanic islands) will be functionally extinct. Important ecosystem processes, particularly decomposition, pollination, and seed dispersal, will likely …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
ÇH Şekercioğlu, GC Daily, PR Ehrlich - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2004
ÇH Şekercioğlu - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA