Authors
Jana C Vamosi, John RU Wilson
Publication date
2008/10
Journal
Ecology Letters
Volume
11
Issue
10
Pages
1047-1053
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
The phylogenetic clustering of extinction may jeopardize the existence of entire families and genera, which can result in elevated reductions of evolutionary history (EH), trait diversity, and ecosystem functioning. Analyses of globally threatened birds and mammals suggest current extinction threats will result in a much higher loss of EH than random extinction scenarios, while the analyses of the taxonomical distribution of regionally rare plants find the opposite pattern. The disproportionately high number of rare plant species within species‐rich families potentially suggests that lower losses of plant EH will be sustained than expected under random extinction. We show that at a global scale, this is not the case. Species‐poor (especially monotypic) angiosperm families are more often at risk of extinction than expected. Because these high‐risk species‐poor families are as evolutionarily distinct as other families, the …
Total citations
20082009201020112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024251598276107991061084