RRC ID 78119
著者 Gimeno M, Giménez J, Chiaradia A, Davis LS, Seddon PJ, Ropert-Coudert Y, Reisinger RR, Coll M, Ramírez F.
タイトル Climate and human stressors on global penguin hotspots: Current assessments for future conservation.
ジャーナル Glob Chang Biol
Abstract As charismatic and iconic species, penguins can act as "ambassadors" or flagship species to promote the conservation of marine habitats in the Southern Hemisphere. Unfortunately, there is a lack of reliable, comprehensive, and systematic analysis aimed at compiling spatially explicit assessments of the multiple impacts that the world's 18 species of penguin are facing. We provide such an assessment by combining the available penguin occurrence information from Global Biodiversity Information Facility (>800,000 occurrences) with three main stressors: climate-driven environmental changes at sea, industrial fisheries, and human disturbances on land. Our analyses provide a quantitative assessment of how these impacts are unevenly distributed spatially within species' distribution ranges. Consequently, contrasting pressures are expected among species, and populations within species. The areas coinciding with the greatest impacts for penguins are the coast of Perú, the Patagonian Shelf, the Benguela upwelling region, and the Australian and New Zealand coasts. When weighting these potential stressors with species-specific vulnerabilities, Humboldt (Spheniscus humboldti), African (Spheniscus demersus), and Chinstrap penguin (Pygoscelis antarcticus) emerge as the species under the most pressure. Our approach explicitly differentiates between climate and human stressors, since the more achievable management of local anthropogenic stressors (e.g., fisheries and land-based threats) may provide a suitable means for facilitating cumulative impacts on penguins, especially where they may remain resilient to global processes such as climate change. Moreover, our study highlights some poorly represented species such as the Northern Rockhopper (Eudyptes moseleyi), Snares (Eudyptes robustus), and Erect-crested penguin (Eudyptes sclateri) that need internationally coordinated efforts for data acquisition and data sharing to understand their spatial distribution properly.
巻・号 30(1)
ページ e17143
公開日 2024-1-18
DOI 10.1111/gcb.17143
PMID 38273518
MeSH Animals Australia Biodiversity Ecosystem Fisheries Humans Spheniscidae*
リソース情報
GBIF Birds collection of Abiko City Museum of Birds Bird specimens of the Yamashina Institute for Ornithology Bird Specimens in the Museum of Nature and Human Activities, Hyogo, Japan Bird specimens of Himeji City Science Museum Ibaraki Nature Museum, Birds collection Bird collection of National Museum of Nature and Science Zoological specimens of Gifu Prefectural Museum Bird specimen database of Kanagawa Prefectural Museum of Natural History Bird specimens of Komatsu City Museum